The International Forum On Biotechnology
  • Home
  • Forum
  • Current Events
  • Our Blog
    • General Blog
  • News
    • Biotechnology News
    • Job Opportunities
    • Newspaper
  • Media
    • Picture Gallery
    • Videos
    • Files
  • Tech's Corner
  • Members Area
    • Subscribe To Us
  • Contact Us
    • Email
  • About Us
    • Location
  • Collaborators
  • Sub-domain Links
    • Mailing List
    • Forum
    • Newspaper
    • Blog
    • Gallery
    • Biot Mail
  • Disclaimer / Terms and Conditions

Spending a Lot of Time on Facebook Does Not Imply Depression

7/15/2012

0 Comments

 
Picture
Over the past few years, a number of studies have proposed that a correlation exists between the amount of time a person spends on Facebook and their chances of suffering from depression. A new research now refutes these claims.

The study was carried out on university students, and covered their online habits, including surfing social media websites such as Facebook and Twitter. The work was conducted at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (USM) School of Medicine and Public Health, Science Blog reports. 

The main conclusion of the investigation is that Facebook Depression is an imaginary condition. In other words, parents should not be alarmed that their children are at risk of developing depression simply because they spend too much time on the Internet. 


At the same time, their length of time they spend online is not an indicator that they are prone to depression. Additional details of the study were published in the July 10 online issue of the esteemed Journal of Adolescent Health.

The study was conducted in response to a report released by the American Academy of Pediatrics in 2011, which argued that prolonged exposure to Facebook and other social media websites could cause depression. The new investigation found no evidence to support these claims. 

The UWM research group, led by scientists Lauren Jelenchick and Dr. Megan Moreno, selected a group of 190 students at the university, aged between 18 and 23, and then performed a series of real-time assessments of the participants' online activity.

At the same time, the team also used a validated, clinical screening method for depression on the study group. The study revealed that the students were on Facebook over half of the total time they spent online. These results were then cross-referenced with the results of the depression screening tests.

The team was unable to find any statistically significant correlation between social media use and participants' risk of developing depression. 

“Our study is the first to present scientific evidence on the suggested link between social-media use and risk of depression. The findings have important implications for clinicians who may prematurely alarm parents about social-media use and depression risks,” Jelenchick explains.

“While the amount of time on Facebook is not associated with depression, we encourage parents to be active role models and teachers on safe and balanced media use for their children,” Moreno concludes.


0 Comments

Financial Crisis Triggered by Maniacs, Literally

7/15/2012

0 Comments

 
Picture
The financial crisis was brought on by maniacs
Most of the actors involved in the events that culminated with the 2008 global financial crisis – bankers, politicians and economists – displayed signs of maniac behavior, investigators in the United Kingdom say. The indicators were there for anyone who was looking. 

The behavior these people exhibited was comparable to that of psychologically disturbed individuals, says award-winning scholar Dr. Mark Stein, from the University of Leicester School of Management.

According to the expert, there is currently no safeguard in place to ensure that a similar crisis will not happen again. His analysis lists the main causes and indicators of the crisis, as well as a description of the actions taken by those in a position of power.


Stein says that a “shared manic culture” existed in the years leading up to the 2008 economic crisis, which was not addressed by anyone. In fact, it was promoted and allowed to continue, and everyone gladly joined in, PsychCentral reports. 

Those who could have done something about it entered an extremely deep denial mode, which then pushed them to engage in risky and dangerous financial practices, insuring and lending without analyzing the implications of their decisions. Details of the study appear in the journal Organization.

“Unless the manic nature of the response in the run up to 2008 is recognized, the same economic disaster could happen again,” Stein says. He lists the four main characteristics of the manic culture as denial, overactivity, triumphalism and omnipotence. 

“A series of major ruptures in capitalist economies were observed and noted by those in positions of economic and political leadership in Western societies,” the investigator explains. 

“These ruptures caused considerable anxiety among these leaders, but rather than heeding the lessons, they responded by manic, omnipotent and triumphant attempts to prove the superiority of their economies,” he goes on to say.

One of the manic responses to the developing crisis was the removal of regulatory safety checks within the banking system, a massive increase in credit derivative deals, and industrializing credit default swaps.

Stein has been analyzing group dynamics from a psychoanalytic perspective for many years, and he says that similar behaviors can be observed (in hindsight) before most of the world's major financial crash events. 

“Witnessing the collapse of Communism, those in power in the West developed the deluded idea that capitalist economies would do best if they eschew any resemblance to those Communist economies, thereby justifying unfettered financial liberalization and the destruction of the regulatory apparatuses of capitalism,” Stein adds.

“The consequences of this manic response have been catastrophic, with the ongoing Eurozone crisis being – in many ways – a result of this,” he concludes.

0 Comments

    Abraham Samuel

    abrahamsamuel@gmx.com

    Archives

    July 2012
    March 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    October 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    April 2011
    March 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    June 2010
    May 2010

    Categories

    All
    Anonymous
    Arrests
    Avast!
    Avira
    Behavior/Humans
    Biotechnology
    Box Office
    Brain
    Chemistry
    Clickjacking
    Climate Change
    Facebook
    Fbi
    Fund-raising
    Genetics
    Global Warming
    Harry Potter
    Health
    Jimmy Wales
    Kaspersky
    Lulzsec
    Microbiology/Genetics
    Movie
    Mse
    Nature
    Nod 32
    Paypal
    Physics
    Release
    Sequel
    Space
    Ui Redressing
    Web Attack
    Wikimedia Foundation
    Wikipedia
    Worm

    RSS Feed

    View my profile on LinkedIn
    Copyright © 2010-2014 The International Forum On Biotechnology ®  WWW.BIOT.TK ®  All rights reserved.
    By Using This Website You Agree To Our Terms and Conditions .

    Creative Commons LicenseCreative Commons License
    The International Forum On Biotechnology by Abraham Samuel is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
    Based on a work at www.biot.tk.
    Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.biot.tk/disclaimer--terms-and-conditions.html.
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.