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Category: UW Experts in the News

Campus Connection: UW researchers prove neurons grown from stem cells can send and receive signals

Capital Times

Researchers working on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus have shown that neurons derived from human embryonic stem cells and implanted into the brains of mice can connect with the brain?s circuitry to both transmit and receive signals. The findings, which were reported Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by a team of scientists who work at the university?s Waisman Center, could help lead to new therapies for treating everything from strokes and traumatic brain injuries to Parkinson?s and Huntington?s disease.

UW Poet Laureate discusses past, goals

Badger Herald

Poetry on the bus lines, sidewalks, radio; poetry ingrained in everyday life ? such is the world Fabu Carter Brisco envisions. Carter Brisco, known simply as Fabu, is Madison?s current Poet Laureate. She is the third person to hold the position of Poet Laureate for the city of Madison, following in the footsteps of John Tuschen and Andrea Musher.

Veterans learn to use yoga and meditation exercises to reconnect with their emotions in a UW-Madison study

Wisconsin State Journal

Rich Low of Madison served as an infantry officer in the Army in Iraq in 2005 and 2006, leading some 280 combat missions. When he came back from the service, he didn?t think his experience affected him in any major way. He had nightmares, and he startled easily, but he chalked that up to just something veterans live with. Then he enrolled in a study he initially wrote off as “just some hippie thing,” where he learned about yoga breathing and meditation. A year later, Low, 30, sums up his experience with two words: “It works.”

That?s the idea behind the study coming from The Center for Investigating Healthy Minds at the Waisman Center on the UW-Madison campus. Researchers there, including associate scientist Emma Seppala, believe something as simple as breathing can change the lives of veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, even those who don’t think they have post-traumatic stress disorder.

Madison360: Is this GOP presidential spectacle the ‘new Iowa’?

Capital Times

(Professor Charles) Franklin, the UW political scientist, thinks the plethora of GOP debates this fall has helped to make them, in a sense, the “new Iowa.” What he means is that by showcasing this assortment of political intellects, a roster cut of Republican candidates is happening now, before the much-trumpeted Iowa caucuses on Jan. 3.

“Those (GOP) debates have become shockingly ubiquitous,” Franklin says of the dozen debates thus far, with more to come. “They are talking about them as the new Iowa, that this is the first elimination round and that is wildly different.”

Doug Moe: Wisconsin author explores WWI anti-German bigotry in ‘Jingo Fever’

Wisconsin State Journal

Death steals everything except our stories. Jim Harrison once used that line to end a poem. I thought of it last week when Stephanie Golightly Lowden told me how she got her mom on audio tape late in her life and at one point her mom said, “I remember when they burned all the German language books.”

While her mother’s memories inspired “Jingo Fever,” Lowden first learned about anti-German bigotry in Wisconsin when she came to Madison in 1970 with a work-study opportunity under E. David Cronon, a noted professor of history at UW-Madison and later dean of the College of Letters and Science.

Shop-local movement gains support

Wausau Daily Herald

Noted: Although no comprehensive data exist proving that people are turning to local merchants — and will continue to do so this holiday shopping season — Garrett and Cynthia Jasper, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor and retail and consumer expert, said the trend is noticeable.

Anthropologists debate role of science

Inside Higher Education

Noted: John Hawks of the University of Wisconsin at Madison objected to people framing the debate as one of the “delusion” of some scholars that there is a bias against science.  Going back to the absence of the word ?science? from the long-range plan, he said that “words matter, and words that are voted on by elected committees matter more?. Words don?t get deleted from text files without agency, without somebody doing it.”

Campus Connection: UW Law School plans to better connect with business world

Capital Times

The University of Wisconsin Law School is launching a new initiative in an attempt to better connect with the business world. “At a state level, I think there is a misperception in a variety of communities that the law school is either indifferent to business law or is hostile to it, and that?s just not true,” says Jonathan Lipson, a UW-Madison professor of law and the director of the school?s new Business Law Initiative.

Gilles Bousquet: International education is critical

Wisconsin State Journal

International education is more than learning a second language or becoming well-versed in world geography. In today?s new economy, it is all about preparing our young people to live, work, lead and compete in an interconnected, interdependent world. In a word, it is about employability. It also is about making sure that home-grown employers ? private, public and nonprofit alike ? can locally recruit the talent they need to fuel their growth in today?s increasingly global marketplace.

Opponents begin massive effort to recall Gov. Walker

Wisconsin State Journal

Charles Franklin, UW-Madison political science professor, said it?s pretty clear that the purpose of going after both the governor and a group of senators is to give Democrats two chances to stop Walker?s agenda. “This way, even if Walker survives, he will be greatly limited in what he and the Republicans can accomplish,” Franklin said.

Tax credits for tuition growing rapidly

Inside Higher Education

Quoted: ?What it is for the middle class is extra money to make sure they can have a vacation that year, or they can buy another TV, or a nicer car,? said Sara Goldrick-Rab, an associate professor of educational policy studies and sociology at the University of Wisconsin at Madison who has studied the impact of financial aid programs on student enrollment and persistence. ?It is not for putting food on the table, and it?s not paying the heating bill, and it?s not deciding whether or not the kid goes to college.?

After a quarter century, American Girl dolls are still wildly popular

Wisconsin State Journal

?American culture is better off for Pleasant Rowland and the creation of American Girl,? said Deborah Mitchell, UW-Madison School of Business senior lecturer in marketing. ?There?s never been a time in our history when there?s been a greater need for girls to have an expanded view of who they are, where they?ve been and what they could be.?

Chris Rickert: Translating ‘Wisconsin Idea’ to Chinese

….In English, “Wisconsin Idea” is said to be the tradition of a university system offering its services and expertise to government, making it more transparent and responsive to the needs of citizens. I?m sure there?s a Chinese way to say the definition, too. It?s just that given China?s autocratic regime and shoddy human rights record, it probably wouldn?t be of much practical use.

Quoted: Laurie Dennis, associate director of the UW-Madison Wisconsin China Initiative. Edward Friedman, a UW-Madison political science professor who has been active in advocating for human rights in China, agreed that engagement hasn’t produced democracy there.

School Choice Programs Snowball (Christianity Today)

Quoted: But others say such conclusions ignore important facts, such as voucher students? increased graduation rates and high parental satisfaction. University of Wisconsin?Madison professor John Witte, an official evaluator of the Milwaukee voucher program, said that while there has not been “a great deal of difference in achievement based on test scores,” there are other positive outcomes.

Ask the Weather Guys: What does the recent big storm in Alaska mean for us?

Wisconsin State Journal

A: The massive storm that struck the west coast of Alaska last Tuesday and Wednesday was truly an amazing meteorological event. The entire Bering Sea coast was under the threat of hurricane-force winds, with many areas facing heavy snow and zero visibility. Importantly, this storm is able to exert hurricane force winds over a much larger area than the typical tropical storm.

Long-distance collaboration: UW, China are close research partners

Wisconsin State Journal

China may be 7,000 miles away, but it?s one of UW-Madison?s closest research partners. There are hundreds of collaborations as university faculty regularly beat a path back and forth to China, working on such areas as blindness, the milk yield of dairy cows and the impact of climate change on deserts. As UW-Madison considers opening an office in Shanghai ? its first foreign outpost ? the potential for developing even more research partnerships is at the forefront of administrators? minds.

“Although we are there every six months, it’s not a continuing presence,” said Gilles Bousquet, dean of the Division of International Studies and vice provost of globalization. “If we had somebody on the ground, they could take advantage of those relationships.”

Online Dating as Scientific Research

New York Times

Noted: If you are curious about numbers: about 81 percent of people misrepresent their height, weight or age in their profiles, according to a study led by Catalina L. Toma, an assistant professor in the department of communication arts at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who wanted to learn more about how people present themselves and how they judge misrepresentation. On the bright side: people tend to tell small lies because, after all, they may eventually meet in person.

Patent reform draws mixed reviews

Wausau Daily Herald

Quoted: Carl Gulbrandsen, managing director of Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, which oversees the University of Wisconsin-Madison?s expansive patent portfolio, characterized the new law as a setback particularly for universities.

5 New Money-Saving Holiday Strategies

SmartMoney.com

But an earlier discount season has its downsides, say experts. For starters, it can make it tougher to stick to a budget — especially for those who haven?t gotten around to making a shopping list, warns Deborah Mitchell, executive director for the Center of Brand and Product Management at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “The more planning you do, the more measured you are,” she says. Other shoppers simple haven?t had the time yet to start picking up gifts and other holiday goods.

Q&A: Visiting professor John Francis says humanity is the environment

Capital Times

An oil spill off the shore of San Francisco in 1971 sent John Francis on a journey that led him, four decades later, to the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he is leading graduate students in rethinking what the environmental movement is all about. On the way, he lived without speaking for 17 years, walked across America, and came to view the environment in a holistic way that he says is the future of the movement — and the planet.

Nixon’s long-held secrets to be revealed, thanks to UW scholar

Wisconsin State Journal

Here?s what we know: In June 1975, a disgraced former President Richard M. Nixon testified before a grand jury about Watergate. What exactly he said has been sealed for the last 36 years. That will change today when the records will be released, thanks to the efforts of UW-Madison emeritus professor Stanley Kutler.

The files will be available on the National Archives website at 11 a.m. CST.

It’s not easy going green

Capital Times

The earth?s population hit the 7 billion mark last week. Perhaps just as eye opening is the fact that the planet is adding more than 200,000 people to that total every 24 hours. That?s nearly another Madison each day.

“We need to start thinking proactively about energy use and other sustainability issues, or we?ll be forced to face the consequences of having to be reactive,” says Craig Benson, who this summer was named UW-Madison?s first director for sustainability research and education. “Resources are no longer plentiful, so it behooves us to think much more strategically about our energy resources.”

Improving global health: In Nicaragua, Madison doctors transform patient, themselves

Wisconsin State Journal

LEÓN, Nicaragua ? Seven doctors and a surgical tech from Madison plunged into a sea of need: parents clutching toddlers with cleft lips and cleft palates, women hiding faces with grotesque bumps and birthmarks, men whose crooked noses suggested car crashes or bar fights. More than 70 patients gathered, most sitting on wooden benches in the hot, cramped, open-air waiting room of León?s public hospital. Some had traveled from hours away. They were waiting for the American doctors to join Nicaraguan doctors and perform the transformative magic of reconstructive plastic surgery. By the end of their visit last month, the UW-Madison doctors would be reshaped, too.