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Praxis
Lab & field notes
Office workers are especially
persnickety about their work
environments when it comes
to airflow. Hui Zhang and
colleagues from the Center for the
Built Environment, who studied
data from more than 200 office
buildings, found the most common
complaint was too little air movement,
followed by an inaccessible
thermostat, and a thermostat
controlled by other people.
Urban slums, where disease
is quickly spread and there
is next to no healthcare, are
breeding grounds for global
pandemics. Lee Riley from the
School of Public Health and colleagues
studied a slum community
of 58,000 in Salvador, Brazil, and
found that healthcare providers
were unaware of chronic illnesses
suffered by slum-dwellers until they
had complications requiring a hospital
stay, or died. Riley et al. say
a new approach to assessing health
in urban slums is urgently needed.
The human eye is better able
to discern a figure's movements
from a distance if the
movements are coordinated with
another figurefor example, two
people having a fistfightfound a
team of scientists led by the dean
of optometry, Dennis Levi. Their
research has implications for how
we interpret eyewitness accounts
of crimes, because it shows the
human eye is more reliable at
perceiving distant, hard-to-see
action than previously thought.
Berkeley materials science professor
Miquel Salmeron is measuring
friction on the nanoscale using a
scanning tunneling microsope (which has a sharp probe instead
of a lens) with a tip just one atom
across. Eventually, scientists
will be able to use these
specialized microscopes to
gauge friction's impact on
nanomachinesinvisible to the
naked eyethat might be used
inside the body to destroy blood
clots and cancer cells.
Could over-the-counter drugs
like Tylenol and Lamasil
(a nail fungus treatment) be
responsible for false-positive
steroids tests in athletes?
Berkeley alum Bryan Sanders,
a graduate of the College of Letters
and Science, says they could affect
levels of testosterone in the blood,
used to detect steroid abuse.
He warns anti-doping labs to be
more cautious when interpreting
positive results and exposing top
athletes to public scrutiny.
Associate professor of chemistry
Dean Toste has discovered in
experiments using gold as a
catalyst that it can act as both an
acceptor and donor of electrons,
meaning it will be useful in producing
chemicals with left or right
"handedness." Many drugs come
in both right- and left-handed
forms, but only one form works
in the body. Gold catalysts
could make synthesis more
efficient, producing only the
effective form of a drug and
not its mirror image.
Doctors who acknowledge
their emotions when dealing
with difficult patients are
better able to treat them,
found Jodi Halpern, associate
professor of bioethics at the School
of Public Health. Doctors often
maintain a professional distance,
but Halpern concluded that more
effective doctors take a moment
to acknowledge their angerthen
listen to negative feedback and
empathize with patients during
"emotionally charged" interactions.
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