PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dartmouth researchers investigate the cognitive effects of athlete head impacts

Dartmouth researchers investigate the cognitive effects of athlete head impacts
2012-05-21
(Press-News.org) Dartmouth faculty and students played prominent roles in a recent study on the cognitive effects of head impacts among student athletes. Tested at the beginning and end of one season, 22 percent of those students who participated in contact sports scored significantly lower in memory and learning skills than expected, as opposed to only 4 percent of non-contact sport athletes.

"These results were found shortly after the season and we do not know how long the effect [of the head impacts] lasts," said Thomas McAllister, Millennium Professor of Psychiatry and Director of Neuropsychiatry at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. "While it may be bad for the 22 percent, the good news is that overall there were few differences in the test results between the athletes in contact sports and the athletes in non-contact sports," he added.

The study subjects were drawn from Dartmouth College and other Division I schools. The groups, numbering more than 250 in total, included football and hockey players, who were compared to participants in track, crew, and Nordic skiing—the contact vs. non-contact sports athletes.

McAllister is the lead author on the study report published in the May 16, 2012, online issue of the journal Neurology. He was joined in the study by Geisel's Laura Flashman, Arthur Maerlender, Margaret Grove, and Tor Tosteson; and John Turco, director of the Dartmouth College Health Service, as well as investigators from other institutions.

Richard Greenwald, an adjunct assistant professor at Dartmouth's Thayer School of Engineering and co-author on the paper, played a unique part in the study. Founder and president of the Lebanon-based company Simbex, he pioneered the innovative Head Impact Telemetry System that enabled the scientists to emplace small sensors in the helmets of the football and hockey players to monitor the head impacts.



INFORMATION:

For more on the study, see the press release from the American Academy of Neurology.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Dartmouth researchers investigate the cognitive effects of athlete head impacts

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New silicon memory chip developed

2012-05-21
The first purely silicon oxide-based 'Resistive RAM' memory chip that can operate in ambient conditions – opening up the possibility of new super-fast memory - has been developed by researchers at UCL. Resistive RAM (or 'ReRAM') memory chips are based on materials, most often oxides of metals, whose electrical resistance changes when a voltage is applied – and they "remember" this change even when the power is turned off. ReRAM chips promise significantly greater memory storage than current technology, such as the Flash memory used on USB sticks, and require much ...

Facebook and smartphones: New tools for psychological science research -- news brief

2012-05-21
WASHINGTON — Whether you're an iPerson who can't live without a Mac, a Facebook addict, or a gamer, you know that social media and technology say things about your personality and thought processes. And psychological scientists know it too – they've started researching how new media and devices both reveal and change our mental states. Two recent articles in the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science, a publication of the Association for Psychological Science, explored how trends in technology are changing the questions psychological scientists are asking and the ...

Using graphene, scientists develop a less toxic way to rust-proof steel

Using graphene, scientists develop a less toxic way to rust-proof steel
2012-05-21
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- University at Buffalo researchers are making significant progress on rust-proofing steel using a graphene-based composite that could serve as a nontoxic alternative to coatings that contain hexavalent chromium, a probable carcinogen. In the scientists' first experiments, pieces of steel coated with the high-tech varnish remained rust-free for only a few days when immersed continuously in saltwater, an environment that accelerates corrosion. By adjusting the concentration and dispersion of graphene within the composite, the researchers increased to about ...

Hadley Nursing Center Teams with Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School for Healing Walls Project

2012-05-21
The Hadley Nursing Center at the Specialty Hospital Of Washington (SHW), joined forces with 4th and 5th grade students at Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School in the Healing Walls Student Art Exhibit. The Healing Walls project was developed by Cheron McNear, Marketing Coordinator for Specialty Hospital of Washington, and is designed to provide the patients and residents in our facility with uplifting artwork that will inspire and assist them in their healing process. The students were led by their art teacher, Mr. Bryan, who directed the theme of the artwork around ...

Richard Knapp Wins the Screenplay Competition at the 2012 Canada Film Festival

Richard Knapp Wins the Screenplay Competition at the 2012 Canada Film Festival
2012-05-21
Andre' Haynes 'The People's Publicist' announced today that Richard Knapp of Las Vegas, NV has won the Award of Excellence of the Screenplay Competition at the 2012 CIFF, for his screenplay, "Can Richard Come Out and Play?". Richard Knapp's Award of Excellence was presented on March 31, 2012 at the Closing Night Award Ceremony at Edgewater Casino's Stadium Club Theatre. CIFF is gaining a reputation for its wide variety of film genres, and has quickly garnered a respected following for its dynamic selections. Held each year in Vancouver, BC, the festival brings ...

Production of chemicals without petroleum

2012-05-21
In our everyday life, we use gasoline, diesel, plastics, rubbers, and numerous chemicals that are derived from fossil oil through petrochemical refinery processes. However, this is not sustainable due to the limited nature of fossil resources. Furthermore, our world is facing problems associated with climate change and other environmental problems due to the increasing use of fossil resources. One solution to address above problems is the use of renewable non-food biomass for the production of chemicals, fuels and materials through biorefineries. Microorganisms are used ...

UGA study finds that education plays mitigating role in escaping roots of adversity

2012-05-21
Athens, Ga. – Decades of research show people born into poverty are likely to continue to live that way as adults. But one University of Georgia researcher has found a way out—education. Children reared in disadvantaged communities and poor families earn less money and experience more health problems as adults than do children raised without adversity, according to Kandauda Wickrama, a professor of human development and life science in the UGA College of Family and Consumer Sciences. "Early adverse life experiences, such as community or family poverty, have a detrimental ...

A North American first at the Montreal Heart Institute

2012-05-21
Montreal, May 18, 2012 – The surgical team at the Montreal Heart Institute (MHI) achieved a North American surgical milestone on May 1st with a sutureless aortic valve replacement through a thoracic incision just five centimetres long. The two patients in their seventies who underwent this innovative procedure, which was performed by cardiac surgeons Denis Bouchard and Michel Carrier, were doing well only one week after their operations. A novel combination "This innovative combination of implanting a Perceval™ S valve through a minimally invasive thoracotomy signals ...

Finding fingerprints in sea level rise

2012-05-21
It was used to help Apollo astronauts navigate in space, and has since been applied to problems as diverse as economics and weather forecasting, but Harvard scientists are now using a powerful statistical tool to not only track sea level rise over time, but to determine where the water causing the rise is coming from. As described in an April 23 paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), graduate students Eric Morrow and Carling Hay demonstrate the use of a statistical tool called a Kalman smoother to identify "sea level fingerprints" – tell-tale ...

Return of the vacuum tube

2012-05-21
Vacuum tubes have been retro for decades. They almost completely disappeared from the electronics scene when consumers exchanged their old cathode ray tube monitors for flat screen TVs. Their replacement – the semiconductor – is generally the cheaper, lighter, more efficient, and easier to manufacture of the two technologies. But vacuum tubes are more robust in high-radiation environments such as outer space. And since electrons travel faster in a vacuum than through a semiconductor, vacuum tubes are an intrinsically better medium for electricity. An international team ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

What causes some people’s gut microbes to produce high alcohol levels?

Global study reveals widespread burning of plastic for heating and cooking

MIT study shows pills that communicate from the stomach could improve medication adherence

Searching for the centromere: diversity in pathways key for cell division

Behind nature’s blueprints

Researchers search for why some people’s gut microbes produce high alcohol levels

Researchers find promising new way to boost the immune response to cancer

Coffee as a staining agent substitute in electron microscopy

Revealing the diversity of olfactory receptors in hagfish and its implications for early vertebrate evolution

Development of an ultrasonic sensor capable of cuffless, non-invasive blood pressure measurement

Longer treatment with medications for opioid use disorder is associated with greater probability of survival

Strategy over morality can help conservation campaigns reduce ivory demand, research shows

Rising temperatures reshape microbial carbon cycling during animal carcass decomposition in water

Achieving ultra-low-power explosive jumps via locust bio-hybrid muscle actuators

Plant-derived phenolic acids revive the power of tetracycline against drug-resistant bacteria

Cooperation: A costly affair in bacterial social behaviour?

Viruses in wastewater: Silent drivers of pollution removal and antibiotic resistance

Sub-iethal water disinfection may accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance

Three in four new Australian moms struggle with body image

Post-stroke injection protects the brain in preclinical study

Cardiovascular risk score predicts multiple eye diseases

Health: estimated one in ten British adults used or interested in GLP-1 medications for weight loss

Exercise to treat depression yields similar results to therapy

Whooping cough vaccination for pregnant women strengthens babies’ immune system

Dramatic decline in new cases of orphanhood in Uganda driven by HIV treatment and prevention programs

Stopping weight loss drugs linked to weight regain and reversal of heart health markers

Higher intake of food preservatives linked to increased cancer risk

Mass General Brigham–developed cholera vaccine completes phase 1 trial

First experimental validation of a “150-year-old chemical common sense” direct visualization of the molecular structural changes in the ultrafast anthracene [4+4] photocycloaddition reaction

Lack of support for people on weight loss drugs leaves them vulnerable to nutritional deficiencies, say experts

[Press-News.org] Dartmouth researchers investigate the cognitive effects of athlete head impacts