Bieber’s superpower was his face’

Bieber’s superpower was his face’

‘Bieber’s superpower was his face’
L.A. Reid thought Justin Bieber was as "beautiful" as a woman when he was first introduced to the singer and admits his looks played a major role in him getting signed to Island Records in 2008.

‘Bieber’s superpower was his face’

Credit: AFP

Singer Justin Bieber and L.A. Reid at the Island Def Jam Spring Collection party at Stephen Weiss Studio on May 20, 2009 in New York City. Photo: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Island Def Jam/AFP

The 59-year-old music mogul signed the 'Baby' hitmaker to Island Records in October of 2008 when Bieber was just 14 years old after being introduced to the Canadian pop star by Usher.

And in his new book 'Sing To Me', Reid recalls that first meeting with Bieber and admits he was as struck by his famous haircut and looks as he was his singing.

In the memoir, Reid reveals: "At four on the dot, Usher walked into my office with this adorable fourteen-year-old boy. This kid was beautiful, like a woman can be beautiful and men rarely are, and he turned it on as soon as he stepped into the room.

"I could see immediately that Justin's hair would be every bit as important as his songs, his voice, his face, or his presence. Justin was simply beautiful - his superpower was his face."

Reid is not the only person who has commented on Bieber's androgynous beauty.

'Orange is the New Black' actress Ruby Rose has noted the 21-year-old singer has a similar face to her own.

She said: "I hear that Justin gets asked a lot if he is Ruby Rose. It must be very frustrating for him."

Female First

Eat Vegetarian, Live Longer?

Eat Vegetarian, Live Longer?

People who eat a vegetarian diet live longer than those who eat meat, according to research published this week.


Researchers from Loma Linda University in California followed 73,308 members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, which encourages a vegetarian diet, for almost six years. There were 12 percent fewer deaths among vegetarians over that period compared to meat-eaters, the researchers reported in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

Other studies have pointed toward similar connections, but this research analyzed a larger group of people. Specifically, researchers found that vegetarians were less likely to die from heart disease, diabetes and kidney failure.

“We can’t tell from this current paper with certainty, but one of the most plausible potential reasons contributing to this beneficial association is perhaps the absence or reduction of meat intake,” lead author Dr. Michael J. Orlich told TIME.

Or it could be that the consumption of certain plant foods has a protective effect, he said. Vegetarians also tend to be thinner. The total number of calories consumed in this study, however, didn’t appear to be linked to living longer.

So should you trade in that hot dog for a tofu variety? Perhaps, especially if you’re a man. The association between a vegetarian diet and death risk was much stronger for men than women, the researchers reported.

“People are confronted with all sorts of nutritional information, but the bottom line is, ‘How will your diet pattern affect your risk of dying?”‘ Orlich told The Wall Street Journal.

Image: iStockphoto

9/11: Your Stories and Ours

9/11: Your Stories and Ours

Each week we at Discovery News honor the best of our readers' comments across our Facebook and Twitter feeds!


feeds! Watch the video below for my response to your angriest, most insightful and funniest comments.

This week, in remembrance of 9/11, we're dedicating this vlog and blog to your stories and stories from our staff. Watch the video for more information on how to share your story with us.

Check out more personal stories from our readers, or add your own memory here: 9/11: What You Remember.

Bieber holds off RiRi on Billboard chart

Bieber holds off RiRi on Billboard chart

Justin Bieber has again this week topped the US Billboard Artist 100 chart, beating out Rihanna who stormed to second place following the release of her new album 'ANTI' and accompanying lead single 'Work', featuring Drake.

Bieber holds off RiRi on Billboard chart

Credit: REUTERS

Beck, Justin Bieber and Joan Jett watch the Saint Laurent fall collection fashion show at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles, California on February 10, 2016. Photo: REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

The chart measures artist activity across some of Billboard's most influential charts including Top Album Sales, the Social 50 and the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart, blending data measuring album and track sales, streaming, radio airplay and social media fan interaction.

This is the sixth total week Bieber is at the summit of the chart, having remained in the top two since November 28 of 2015 when he first reached the top spot. Streaming gives him his biggest slice of Artist 100 points (25%) whilst radio airplay lands him 22% of his points and social reaction and song download sales gain him 21% of his points a piece.

Rihanna goes from 16 to find herself at number two, having previously found her peak at number 11 with 'ANTI' opening at number one on Top Album Sales, with 124,000 sold in the tracking week according to Nielsen Music.

Those sales account for 58% of her Artist 100 points, with digital sales at 30% and single 'Work' jumping by 23% to 156,000 downloads sold.

Adele has gone from two to three this week, whilst Drake holds strong at number four and Kevin Gates vaults 543% up from number 61 to number five, with album 'Islah' debuting at two on Top Album Sales (93,000).

ZAYN sits at number six, with twenty one pilots at seven, The Weeknd at eight and Sia at nine. Charlie Puth rounds out the top 10 in the 10th position, jumping from his position of 31 last week.

Female First

Are Humans Still Evolving?

Are Humans Still Evolving?

P – A – S/Flickr.com
Despite using culture and technology as ways of adapting to new environments, humans, like all other living things on Earth, undergo genetic changes as a response to conditions around them — or in this case, favorable traits in their genes.


A recent studysuggests that humans aren’t exempt from evolutionary pressures.

In other words, we’re all still evolving.

Most discussion about our evolutionary history focuses on macroevolution, or changes occurring over long periods of time, including why our teeth are smaller when compared with our ancestors’ and how our species may have interacted with Neanderthals.

Instead, the study’s authors provide an example of microevolution, or changes tracked in a few generations. The team, led by Canadian researchers, studied the small island town of Ile aux Coudres, located in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in Quebec.

Researchers looked at church records from 1799 to 1940, which provided detailed accounts of marriages, births and deaths. Because the vast majority of families have remained on the island with few newcomers arriving, it was possible to build extensive family trees from the demographic data. The team studied the age at which women are capable of giving birth, a trait that’s heritable between generations.

They found that the average age at which women on the island had their first child fell from 26 years to 22 years of age over the time period. But what makes the finding unique — an example of microevolution — is the relationship between younger childbirth and family trees. The trend closely follows genetic ties, and it increased over time, suggesting the trait was passed down and favored by natural selection.

But how can scientists rule out social and cultural factors that affect when a woman first gives birth?

Since the small island has a rather egalitarian history, social standing has been less of an issue. In addition, if cultural factors and better nutrition caused the spike in younger mothers, it would be traceable through all women suddenly, not through family lineages over time.

Natural selection, as suggested by a researcher not involved in the study, may have even acted on a group of genes, not just one gene, responsible for sexual maturity, according to a New York Times article.

Culture still matters, though, and one Wired points out that social conditions still allowed for natural selection to occur, meaning conditions were favorable for it to happen.

Marks & Spencer thinks small as it gears up for Australian debut

Marks & Spencer thinks small as it gears up for Australian debut

The $13 billion British department store retailer Marks & Spencer is accelerating plans to enter the crowded Australian market.

It's expected Marks & Spencer will use the small format stories it already uses in Asia for its Australian debut.

It's expected Marks & Spencer will use the small format stories it already uses in Asia for its Australian debut. Photo: Chris Ratcliffe

Marks & Spencer has just appointed two new directors to a corporate entity known as Marks & Spencer (Australia) Pty Ltd which has previously been dormant for almost seven years, and is on the hunt for retail space in Sydney.

The move into Australia is in line with Marks & Spencer���s chief executive officer Marc Bolland���s strategy of transforming the company from a traditional British high street retailer into an international multi-channel retailer.

It will put further pressure on Myer and David Jones, which also face the imminent arrival of fast fashion chains including H&M from Sweden and Japan���s Uniqlo.

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But Marks & Spencer won���t be tackling Myer and David Jones head-on, instead aiming to set up small format stores that are around one-fifth the size of a large department store operated by David Jones and Myer.

The timing of the UK giant���s arrival will depend on it securing good sites, with Sydney seen as a likely first target.

Marks & Spencer has 766 stores in the UK and operates 418 stores in countries across Europe and Asia.

It has 16 outlets in Hong Kong and 10 in Singapore and has been eyeing the Australian market for some time.

Marks & Spencer successfully operates a small format retail model in Singapore and Hong Kong where a range of fashion, beauty and gourmet foods form the centrepiece of its offering.

There is speculation that Marks & Spencer will use the small format as its entry into Australia, with the return on investment much better than if it chose to have a more extensive range of items mirroring Myer and David Jones.

The small format stores are likely to be around 2,000 square metres, compared with 10,000 square metres for a full-line department store. Fashion and beauty take up around 80 per cent of the floor space in a small format Marks & Spencer, with food the remaining 20 per cent.

Having stand-alone stores provides a stronger brand presence, which M&S can leverage in its multi-channel approach.

Offshore arrivals

Nora Farren, director of research at Colliers, said offshore retailers were attracted to the Australian retail sector because the local economy was strong relative to many other countries around the world.

Australians were still showing a propensity to spend in the retail sector and consumers were generally enthusiastic about new offerings.

���The issue for them will be finding sites,������ Ms Farren said.

She believed Marks & Spencer would perform solidly in the Australian market, with online sales across the retail sector still relatively low compared with bricks and mortar retailers.

���Australians like to spend and they like new things and I can see them doing quite well,������ she said.

Rio Tinto chairman Jan du Plessis is a director of Marks & Spencer Group. Under Mr Bolland���s leadership, the company has earmarked international growth as one of the core planks of its strategy, using a ���clicks and bricks������ approach.

The latest figures from National Australia Bank���s online retail index show that Australians spent around $14.6 billion online in the year ended November 30, 2013 and this equated to about 6.4 per cent of the total spending by shoppers with traditional bricks and mortar retailers.

In December Marks & Spencer notified the corporate regulator it had appointed two directors to the entity known as Marks & Spencer (Australia) Pty Ltd.

They are Anthony Clarke, who is an assistant company secretary of the Marks & Spencer Group parent company in Britain, and Melissa Lovell, a corporate lawyer at oil and gas company, Santos.

Ms Lovell previously worked at the UK law firm Linklaters.

Marks & Spencer (Australia) Pty Ltd has also just notified the corporate regulator that its new registered office is now at law firm Minter Ellison���s Sydney premises, and this became effective on January 21 this year.

JB cancels 'depressing' meet and greets

JB cancels 'depressing' meet and greets

Justin Bieber has cancelled his future fan meet and greets.

JB cancels 'depressing' meet and greets

Credit: AFP

Justin Bieber performs on stage during opening night of the 'Purpose World Tour' at KeyArena on March 9, 2016 in Seattle, Washington. Photo: Mat Hayward/Getty Images/AFP

The 'What Do You Mean?' hitmaker may have only just kicked off his Purpose World Tour but he's already decided to axe his intimate backstage experience, which cost $925 a pop, because they make him feel "drained and unhappy."

Taking to his Instagram account on Tuesdaynight, he wrote: "I'm going to be canceling my meet and greets. I enjoy meeting such incredible people but I end up feeling so drained and filled with so much of other people's spiritual energy that I end up so drained and unhappy..

"Want to make people smile and happy but not at my expense and I always leave feeling mentally and emotionally exhausted to the point of depression ..

"The pressure of meeting people's expectations of what I'm supposed to be is so much for me to handle and a lot on my shoulders. Never want to disappoint but I feel I would rather give you guys the show and my albums as promised.

"Can't tell you how sorry I am, and wish it wasn't so hard on me.. And I want to stay in the healthy mindset I'm in to give you the best show you have ever seen (sic)."

However, although he's claimed pulling the plug on his meet and greets was down to him feeling depressed, it's believed the 21-year-old pop star made the call after a security scare at his gig at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on Monday when a fan got within 10 feet of him.

A source told TMZ: "This was the last straw in an increasing problem Justin's team has had in managing the number of people who wanted special access to the singer before and after the concert. Up to now, around 20 people purchased one-on-one packages, and up to 200 others paid to meet Justin in groups. He's had his hair pulled, clothes ripped and one fan even gave him the flu. Justin never complained, but Monday night's scare was a wake up call for security."

Bang Showbiz

New Procedure May Turn Brown Eyes Blue

New Procedure May Turn Brown Eyes Blue

A new technique may be able to turn brown eyes blue.


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A new technique may be able to turn brown eyes blue. But is it safe?

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Most Popular Plastic Surgeries: Photos

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Ever since 1890, when the use of anesthetics and antiseptics made it unlikely for people to die getting a nose job, cosmetic plastic surgery has been part of the global culture. By the 1920s, plastic surgery grew ever more common, and became associated with vanity. New techniques developed during World War II helped further increase demand for -- and types of -- the elective surgeries. The era of minimally-invasive techniques has marked a new generation of plastic surgery options, with 14.6 million cosmetic procedures performed in the United States in 2012, up 5 percent since 2011. Here are the current most popular cosmetic surgeries, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

iStockPhoto

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Initially, cosmetic plastic surgery was not seen as a vanity procedure, said Emory University professor Sander Gilman, author of Making the Body Beautiful: A Cultural History of Aesthetic Surgery. "Jews in Germany had their noses reduced so they could get jobs," Gilman said. As such, it was equally common for men and women to undergo plastic surgery. "By the end of the 19th century there's a common understanding in the West that you can transform yourself, you can move classes -- and you can get a new nose," Gilman said. Ear pinbacks were also popular at the time, to correct "prominent ears."

iStockPhoto

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By the 1920s, the world of cosmetic surgery had shifted. By then, the first textbook about facial cosmetic surgery was in circulation, called "The Correction of Featural Imperfections" by Charles Miller. Women sought face lifts for reasons associated with vanity, not employment. "It becomes something we associate with the upper middle class," Gilman said.

iStockPhoto

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Everything from ivory to rubber has been used to augment breasts since the beginning of the 20th century. Nothing worked well (one of the first experimental substances, paraffin, had particularly bad results, with breasts that grew hard and lumpy and high rates of infection) until the Dow Corning Corporation developed the first silicone breast implants in 1961. Even though breast augmentation dropped 7 percent from 2011, it's still the No. 1. plastic surgery in the U.S., with 286,000 procedures in the U.S. in 2012. (It's followed by nose reshaping, eyelid surgery, liposuction, and facelifts.)

iStockPhoto

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"People who have had significant weight loss are coming to grips with dealing with [their bodies]," said surgeon David Reath, a member of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. "Whether they've lost weight through weight reduction surgery or diet and exercise, if they were overweight for a long period, the skin hangs around, and it’s very demoralizing. They're looking for a solution." One solution appears to be a procedure called an upper arm lift, which involves either liposuction or brachioplasty, a surgery that removes loose skin is removed from the back of the arms. Plus, "anytime we start talking about arms the image of the buff First Lady comes into mind," Reath said.

iStockPhoto

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"This is up in every age group of men," Reath said. "I think it's because there’s a growing awareness that there is a solution to something that's extra troubling to men of all ages. It can have a tremendous psychological effect on young men going through puberty." In fact, the number of men having cosmetic procedures in general has increased so dramatically that Gilman thinks it will once again even out to match the rate of women who undergo plastic surgery.

iStockPhoto

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New minimally invasive and cheaper procedures such as Botox and other injectable fillers took off when the economy took a downturn, Reath said. "You could take less time off from work [to recover]; year after year it has continued to grow," he said. In fact, the popularity of such procedures is growing so fast that Gilman believes there will come a point in the next 10 years or so where people will wonder why you didn't have a cosmetic procedure if you have sagging skin under your jaw or lines around your eyes. "It's becoming the standard," he said.

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The idea to use lasers to turn brown eyes blue was born in an unlikely place: a dermatologist's office.

Driving home after having some pigment spots removed from his skin by laser, Gregg Homer wondered what would happen if you used a similar laser on the eyes.

An inventor who had a Ph.D in biology, Homer did a little research and quickly realized the potential of the idea: a study in the 1980’s had shown that underneath every brown eye is a blue eye. And that brown layer, Homer discovered, appeared to be superficial enough that it could, theoretically, be removed.

The colors in our environment make a major impact on how our food tastes! And it doesn't end there.

ULTRA.F/Digital Vision/Getty Images

"I went back to my dermatologist and said, I've got a question for you," Homer told Discovery News. "What would happen if you used this on an iris?"

The dermatologist eventually joined his board of investigators, and now, almost 20 years later, the surgery is going through human testing in Costa Rica via Homer's company called Stroma.

The original idea, that the frequency of the green laser is such that it passes straight through the cornea and is only absorbed by dark color, makes it "incredibly safe and incredibly differentiating," Homer said.

The change isn't immediate; the laser is set at a low energy so that the blue eye is revealed over a couple of weeks.

While there have been no adverse effects in the 37 people who have had one eye treated in trials outside of the U.S., Homer said, it's too early to say for certain what long-term effects the procedure could have. Ophthalmologists say the primary health concern, at least theoretically, is glaucoma.

"Maybe you don't see it immediately, but 10 years down the road it could be a public health problem," Dr. Ivan Schwab, an ophthalmologist and clinical spokesperson for the American Academy of Ophthalmology and professor of ophthalmology at the University of California, Davis, told Discovery News.

"I wouldn't completely dismiss the procedure; I'm not going to tell you it won't work, but my biggest concern is long-term problems," he added.

"Other complications could include inflammation of the iris," said Dr. Schwab, who noted that any eye surgery involves risk to the eye or the patient.

"It's a curious idea, and it will be interesting to see if there's a market for it," Schwab said, "but I wouldn't be the one to sign up for it."

So far, none of the patients in the trials have experienced an increase in pressure which precedes glaucoma, Homer said; in fact, most have shown a decrease. Because the surgery removes pigment on the front of the iris, not the back, which is where fragments of pigment can become trapped and lead to a blockage that can cause glaucoma, and because the laser breaks the pigments into extremely fine particles, the risk for glaucoma is low, he said.

Picture the cells like clear empty bags with granules of pigment, Homer said.

"If you hit the pigment cell it heats up the pigment and eventually it bursts the cell, and the pigment granules are released into the fluid in the front chamber of the eye," he said.

Instead of exploding it on impact, the researchers looked for a "sweet spot" where the pigment could be agitated enough that the body would take over and do the rest of the work on its own.

Homer said he won't release the procedure to the public until he deems it safe enough for his 20-year-old, brown-eyed daughter.

"She's been obsessed with it," he said. "And as we treat more people, we're getting closer and closer."

Homer doesn't expect the procedure to be available in the U.S. anytime soon;

Getting the treatment in the U.S. is a ways down the line, and is expected to cost about $5,000. But Homer said he expects the procedure to be available in other countries much more quickly.

For the record, Homer himself has blue eyes, as does country singer Crystal Gayle, who recorded the song "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" in 1977.

Can Blind People Be Racist?

Can Blind People Be Racist?

Helen Keller and her teacher Anne Sullivan
Wikimedia Commons
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Animals and insects see the world in unique ways.


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Gallery

Animal Superpower -- The Eyes Have It: Photos

Animals and insects see the world in unique ways. From fish, to dogs, to birds to shrimp, super-eyesight allows them to thrive in places others can't. Dung beetles, for example, have internal compasses that are sensitive to the sun, Marie Dacke of Lund University and her colleagues have determined. In a paper published in the latest Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, she and her team explain that solar cues and skylight help guide where the beetles roll their coveted balls of poop. Video: 5 Incredible Insect Superpowers

Kay-africa, Wikimedia Commons

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Siberian huskies evolved colorful, almond-shaped eyes to see in low light, desolate northern regions. A quirk of genetics is that an individual dog may have two differently colored eyes. A single eye may also feature two colors. It's known as a "parti" or "split" eye. Photos: Ugliest Dog Contenders

shmoomeema, Wikimedia Commons

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Chameleons can rotate and focus their eyes separately to look at two different objects at the same time, according to the San Diego Zoo. This gives chameleons a full 360-degree view around their body. Photos: Chameleon Colors Act Like a Mood Ring

Steffen239, Flickr

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Ants have vision "superpowers," interactive media designers and artists Chris Woebken and Kenichi Okada believe. Using their ant apparatus, humans can see as ants do by placing microscope antennas on their hands (ants have these on their heads) that transmit a 50-fold magnified view of wherever the person's hand is resting. 33 Bizarre New Ant Species Discovered

williamcho, Flickr

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Imagine if you spent most of the day looking up from below. That is what escolar, a large and mysterious deep-sea fish, do, according to a new study by Eric Warrant of the University of Lund and colleagues. Escolar use this technique to "sit and wait" for prey, hoping something tasty will swim over them.

Wikimedia Commons

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Shrimps have some of the most complex visual systems in the animal kingdom. Justin Marshall of the University of Queensland and his team found that some shrimp stare down prey before attacking with a movement that is so swift that it actually boils water in front of the shrimp. (The other temperate water surrounding the shrimp prevents it from cooking itself to death!)

Tomasz Sienicki, Wikimedia Commons

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Most animals, including humans, have round pupils, but the eyes of goats (toads, octopi and a few others too) tend to be horizontal and rectangular with rounded corners. This broadens the horizon that they see, enabling them to better spot predators.

Stewart Butterfield, Flickr

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Bird eyes, such as those of the eagle seen here, feature oil droplets located in the front, Doekele Stavenga of the University of Groningen and colleagues have discovered. The droplets serve as "microlenses" that help to filter and direct light. On the Hunt for Bald Eagles

Pen Waggener, Flickr

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The eyes of certain animals, such as raccoons and cats, glow in the dark. Their eyes have a light-reflecting surface, known as the tapetum lucidum, which makes this possible. Depending on the animal, the glow takes on certain colors. Cats tend to have eyes that glow green. Miniature schnauzer eyes will sometimes glow turquoise, according to Colorado State University ophthalmologist Cynthia Powell.

Wikimedia Commons

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Cuttlefish, a type of mollusk, are the transformer visionaries of the animal kingdom. They reshape their entire eyes to adjust to what they see. Humans and many other species, in contrast, usually just reshape their eye lenses to get a better look at something.

Alexander Vasenin, Wikimedia Commons

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Giant squid have the largest eyes in the world, according to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. At up to 10 inches in diameter, the human head-sized eyes help giant squid to see in deep water. It's believed that they can detect a moving sperm whale from 394 feet away. Giant Squid Photos

MyFWCmedia, Flickr

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We create a mental map of our surroundings in our brain. As Michael Land of the University of Sussex explains, "To interact with objects in the world we need to know where they are, whether they are in our field of view or outside it. Objects in memory have to move in the brain as we move through the world, otherwise they would be not be in the right place."

Fernando Mafra, Fotopedia

Sighted people instinctually categorize other people by race, according to research presented at the 110th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association in Chicago, but far fewer blind people do this.

“The visual process of assigning race is instantaneous, and it’s an example of automatic thinking — it happens below the level of awareness,” Asia Friedman, who conducted the research, explained in a press release.

“With blind people,” she added, “the process is much slower as they piece together information about a person over time. Their thinking is deliberative rather than automatic, and even after they’ve categorized someone by race, they’re often not certain that they’re correct.”

Friedman, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Delaware, interviewed 25 blind people to determine how they evaluate others. The study considered people who were born without sight as well as those who became blind later in life.

Friedman also considered prior research on what’s known as the “ automatic visual processing” of sighted people.

The research found that, generally, the blind assign race only after they have extensive interaction with a person. These are not just fleeting moments, or quick casual encounters. They instead tend to rely on lengthier conversations and use of other senses, such as hearing and touch.

Blind people as a whole, however, are not immune to categorizing others based on race.

“Many of my subjects said they thought that being blind made them less likely to develop stereotypes,” Friedman said. She added, however, that the interviews revealed many of them did indeed hold cultural stereotypes or make racial assumptions, even though their definition of race was not based on appearance.

Nevertheless, the study provides evidence that there are different ways to experience and construct race.

In the future, schools might build on the findings, with exercises designed to enhance our ability to relate to others using methods that go beyond surface level instinctual judgments.

DNews: Why Aren't Humans Cannibals?

DNews: Why Aren't Humans Cannibals?

Jan 8, 2016 12:13 PM ET
Cannibalism is one of our biggest taboos, with good reason.

Cannibalism is one of our biggest taboos, with good reason. For starters, it's gross, and for other starters, it's a fast track to some gnarly diseases. However, that's not to say early man didn't eat, er, other early men.

Jul 27, 2015 09:58 AM ET //

An isolated tribe living in the Amazon rainforest will soon be contacted by the Peruvian government for their own safety.Isolated Amazon Tribe

Mar 20, 2015 06:10 AM ET

For many years, indigenous tribes in remote regions of Ecuador struggled to get access to vital medical care. But a single mobile surgical unit is changing all of that.

Mar 16, 2015 09:23 AM ET

The Shipibo Indians, of Peru, perform a ritual that connects them more closely to shapes and patterns that later manifest in their work: the consumption of ayahuasca, a powerful plant hallucinogen.

Sep 12, 2014 07:30 AM ET //

An apparent missionary and other outsiders are shown giving clothes and other gifts to children from an isolated indigenous tribe.

Aug 28, 2014 02:00 PM ET //

The petite Dorset people went extinct before the Vikings arrived and never mixed with Inuit or Eskimo peoples.

Aug 15, 2014 08:00 AM ET //

Pushed out of their home territory by violence, a second wave of people who had been living in voluntary isolation in the Amazon rainforest has made contact with villagers in Brazil.

Jul 31, 2014 05:51 AM ET

Last month's news of an isolated Amazon rainforest tribe in Brazil making contact with outsiders for the first time in almost two decades prompts the question: Are there many more such tribes left?

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Big Yang Theory: Is It Chinese Year of Goat or Sheep?

Big Yang Theory: Is It Chinese Year of Goat or Sheep?

Is it the Chinese year of the goat or the sheep?


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Is it the Chinese year of the goat or the sheep? Chinese folklorists say focusing on specific animals misses the point.

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China's 2015 Harbin Ice Festival: Photos

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Early in January, the 2015 Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival kicked off in northeast China. The festival has featured elaborate snow sculpture for more than 30 years. Herewith, some chilly scenes from the ice city. PHOTOS: Snowflakes Up Close and Personal

www.harbinice.com

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Visitors take in monumental ice architecture, an ice maze, ice slide -- and for the adventurous (or foolhardy, depending on your worldview) cold water swimming in (air) temperatures that can reach -30 degrees Celsius and Fahrenheit. Winter Storm Stalls Midwest, Northeast: Photos

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Festival-goers can ride a sort of ice tricycle -- with a sled rail instead of a front wheel -- or try sledding or skiiing or just take a seat.

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View Caption + #4: The sculptures are on display through the end of February.

10 Ways Warmer Winters Wreck Earth

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A grand opening ceremony starts the fun, followed by an ice lantern show, sculpture competition and group wedding ceremony attended by Chinese and other international couples. PHOTOS: Steampunk Artist Transforms Ocean Trash

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The ice blocks used in the sculptures are created using water from the Songhua River, then chiseled by picks and saws into ornate, large-scale works of art. PHOTOS: Wild Winter Weather

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At night the ice buildings are illuminated as visitors traipse through the world's largest ice sculptures. Chill with These Ice Sculpture Photos

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Sheep or goat?

We've always suspected that people who pick up languages easily are smarter than the rest of us, but does this hold up to scientific scrutiny?

DCI

China's coming lunar new year has stirred a debate over which zodiac creature is the correct one -- but Chinese folklorists dismiss the fixation on animals as missing the point.

Traditional astrology in China attaches different animal signs to each lunar year in a cycle of 12 years.

The symbol for the new year starting on February 19 is the "yang", which can refer to any member of the caprinae subfamily -- or even beyond -- depending on what additional Chinese character it is paired up with.

For example, a goat is a "mountain yang", a sheep is a "soft yang" and a Mongolian gazelle is a "yellow yang".

Both goats and sheep appear in Chinese new year paintings, paper-cuts and other festival decorations.

Folklorists say it does not matter which one is used since the zodiac sign was chosen for the Chinese character's auspicious connotation rather than the specific animal -- at least in the beginning.

"This 'yang' is fictional. It does not refer to any specific kind (of sheep or goat)," Zhao Shu, a researcher with the Beijing Research Institute of Culture and History, told AFP.

- Much ado about mutton -

"Yang" is a component of the written Chinese character "xiang", which means auspiciousness, and the two were interchangeable in ancient Chinese, experts say.

It is also a part of the character "shan", which counts kindness and benevolence as among its meanings.

"Therefore 'yang' is a symbol of... blessing and fortune and represents good things," said Yin Hubin, an ethnology researcher with the China Academy of Social Sciences, a government think-tank.

"It is connected to the original implication of the Chinese character as an ideogram and reflects the world view of the Chinese people in primitive times," he said.

That said, the zodiac sign is being shunned by some Chinese parents-to-be, with expectant mothers scheduling Caesarean sections to give birth before the current year of the horse ends, according to media reports.

What's Behind Road Rage?

What's Behind Road Rage?

Being inside a car can lend a sense of anonymity, which can lead some to act out rage.


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10 Gender Differences Backed Up by Science

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Are men inherently better than women are at some skills, and vice versa? Though we tend to think otherwise -- and there are always notable exceptions -- scientific research frequently concludes that men and women excel in different areas. So what about nature versus nurture? As Diane Halpern, a professor of psychology at Claremont McKenna College, said during the British Psychological Society Annual Conference last year: "We do socialize our boys and girls differently, but the contribution of biology is not zero."

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Men are better at judging person’s size based on their voice A study in the latest Biology Letters holds that "men are better than women at acoustic size judgments." This means that men have an enhanced ability to determine a person's size based on the sound of his or her voice, according to Benjamin Charlton and colleagues from the University of Sussex. The findings, conclude the authors, "lend support to the idea that acoustic size normalization, a crucial prerequisite for speech perception, may have been sexually selected through male competition."

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View Caption + #3: Men have better spatial awareness

Men possess a stronger ability to think of objects in three dimensions, helping with navigation, which was also discussed during the British Psychological Society Annual Conference. Even 3-month-old infants exhibit the sex-based behavioral difference. It could be that hunting, competitive battles and other activities conducted in the past helped to lock the skill into males.

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View Caption + #4: Women are better at locating specific items

Men often may have better spatial awareness than women do, but women are "better at remembering where things are," Halpern said. As a result, women are more likely to navigate using landmarks. While both men and women can therefore find their way to places with about equal skill, women might have an edge, since they could likely find things like missing car keys and maps first.

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View Caption + #5: Women are better at worrying

Women produce only about half as much serotonin -- a neurotransmitter linked to depression -- as men do and they have fewer transporters to recycle it, according to Karolinska Institute research. As a result, women tend to worry more. That’s not always a bad thing, as women might then possess an enhanced ability to foresee problems and plan how to handle them.

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View Caption + #6: Women detect colors better than men do

Women can detect subtle variations in color that men fail to identify, such as noting certain off-white colors versus white, Israel Abramov of CUNY’s Brooklyn College, determined a few months ago. It could be that women -- acting as gatherers -- developed improved color detection while searching for edibles. Abramov suspects that sex hormones are behind the differences, given that male sex hormones can alter development in the visual cortex.

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View Caption + #7: Men handle lack of sleep better than women do

A Duke University study found that men could tolerate sleep deprivation more than women could. This is either good or bad news for men, as sleep is involved in brain repair, when the brain sorts out memories and other information acquired throughout the day.

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View Caption + #8: We are evenly matched at multitasking

Some studies have found that men are better at multi-tasking, while others have determined just the opposite. When compiled, the data so far suggests that our multitasking skills could be evenly matched. As we age, we also tend to lose, at about the same rate, our ability to handle more than one activity at once. Older men and women exhibit more difficulty in switching between tasks at the level of brain networks, according to a study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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View Caption + #9: Men are better at detecting infidelity

Men appear to be better at reading subtle vocal, visual, scent and other cues indicating their partner's fidelity, concludes a study published in the journal Human Nature. The downside, said co-author Paul Andrews of Virginia Commonwealth University, is that that these cues aren’t always accurate, and men are more likely than women to falsely suspect cheating. Yet another study on cheating, published in the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, found that men are more upset by sexual infidelity, and while women are more upset by emotional infidelity. Women, it should be mentioned, outperform men when identifying emotions, according to a study in the journal Neuropsychologia.

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View Caption + #10: We are evenly matched in terms of intelligence

Men tend to be larger and, as a result, tend to have bigger brains. Size, however, does not necessarily correlate with intelligence. Braininess instead relies more on neuronal connections, which we help forge when learning by experience or study. Historically, women's IQs have lagged behind those of men by up to 5 points, but now women are surpassing men in such tests. Rex Jung, an assistant professor of neurosurgery at the University of New Mexico, has found that men tend to have more brain grey matter while women have more white matter. The differences yet again are evident, but it appears that the evolutionary battle between the sexes can, at least for now, be judged as a tie.

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View Caption + #11: Women usually live longer than men

Better immunity, reduced risk for blood diseases and lower risk-taking may give women an edge on longevity. Based on Centers for Disease Control data, women tend to have a life expectancy that’s 5.3 years greater than men's, but the gap is narrowing. In 1978, it was 7.8 years. The good news for men is that they tend to remain sexually active longer than women do. "Interest in sex, participation in sex and even the quality of sexual activity were higher for men than women, and this gender gap widened with age," said Stacy Tessler Lindau of the University of Chicago, who worked on a related study.

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What drives people to take shots at other motorists from behind the wheel of a car? Aggression, territoriality and a feeling of anonymous power are the psychological ingredients of road rage, experts say.

On Wednesday, New Mexico authorities arrested a 33-year-old man and charged him with murder this week in connection with a road rage incident in which he allegedly shot and killed a 4-year-old girl who was sitting in the back seat.

Police say the violence was preventable.

Are you easily made angry whenever you're very hungry, and then as soon as you eat, you're fine? Why does this happen? Laci explains the science of being "Hangry."

“We’re starting to see this throughout our nation,” said Albuquerque Police Chief Gordon Eden at a Wednesday news conference. “And this is something that should not be happening in Albuquerque, New Mexico, let alone anywhere else in the United States.”

Police said the girl was shot when a driver pulled up and fired into a car in which she and her 7-year-old brother were passengers in the back seat. She later died at a hospital. Her father had picked the children up from school, Eden said, and had yelled at the shooter after being cut off in a lane change.

While the specifics of the incident are still being investigated, experts say they usually arise from a perfect storm of perceived insults, stress, male aggression and the feeling that you can’t be held responsible for things you do from behind the wheel of a car.

“This about a sense of power and anonymous power behind the wheel,” said Steve Albrecht, a security consultant and former San Diego Police officer who has written about the causes of road rage. “If you look at the anonymous nature people have in a car, then mix in male aggression, they believe they can do what they want with no consequences.”

Albrecht added that violence is usually a young man’s game.

“There’s a territoriality that young men get,” he said. “That comes from immaturity also the anonymous nature of this. You wouldn’t be able to identify them.”

He said that aggression, combined with easy access to firearms in many states, has fueled road rage incidents.

The actors in road rage incidents often take slights very personally, according to Emil Coccaro, chairman of the department of psychiatry at the University of Chicago who has studied the intersection of firearms and road rage.

“People with road rage respond to a threat with a bigger emotional response,” he said. “They tend to think that people are doing what they are doing to mess around with them. In fact they are doing it to get where they are going, and they are in the way.”

The solution has to come from inside, both experts say. Breathing, counting to 10, listening to music, or just refusing to care if someone beats you to a light or cuts you off are strategies to defuse road rage before it gets out of control.

“Life is not like the movies where you think you can do something and there is no consequences,” Coccaro said.

“You don’t know if the person has a gun or a golf club.”

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