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Malaria and Sickle Cell Anemia

Sickle cell anemia is a genetic disorder in which the red blood cells collapse into a 'sickle' shape and cannot carry oxygen very well. They also tend to get stuck in narrow blood vessels, causing painful crises. The disease is caused by a change in one amino acid making up the large hemoglobin molecule that gives blood its red color and its ...

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MalariaSickleCell
Medicine

It's Hay Fever Season!

If spring's flying pollen is making you sneeze, you are not alone. Some 40 to 50 million people in the United States complain of respiratory allergies, and experts estimate that three to four million ... Continue reading

HayFever
Geology

The San Andreas Fault

Scientists have learned that the Earth's crust is fractured into a series of 'plates' that have been moving very slowly over the Earth's surface for millions of years. Two of these moving plates meet ... Continue reading

TheSanAndreasFault
Engineering

Hybrid Cars: The Magic Braking

You have undoubtedly seen one of the hybrid cars on the road. You probably heard that they are unlike any other fossil fuel or electric car. They are sort of both. ... Continue reading

HybridCars
Biology

When A Bass Isn't A Bass

Chilean Sea Bass, a very popular though overfished deep-sea fish, is not a bass at all. It is actually a Patagonian Toothfish (Dissostichus eleginoides), or sometimes its cousin, the Antarctic ... Continue reading

SeaBass

A Little OCD In Me And Thee?

ALittleOCDInMeAndTheeObsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) may not get as much attention as learning disorders such as dyslexia and ADHD, but its rate of occurrence (about 2 to 3 percent) makes it more common than asthma or diabetes. What exactly is OCD, and how do you know if you have it? By definition, the obsessions of OCD are persistent thoughts or images that are felt to be unwanted and intrusive. In other words, most of the things we ordinarily call obsessions would not qualify someone for an OCD diagnosis. People who are, in the normal sense, obsessed with an object of romantic desire -- who are 'in love' or 'infatuated' -- do not have OCD. If they were chronically tormented by inappropriate sexual fantasies, that might be an obsession in the OCD sense.

On the other hand, if you look at the symptoms of OCD, you can view them as extreme forms of ordinary personality traits that people have to varying degrees. Under most circumstances, those traits will not interfere with a person's life the way that OCD traits do. But they can be viewed as risk factors for developing full-blown OCD, and they also seem to be relatively common among close family members of people with OCD. For example, we all differ in the degree to which we display something called thought-action fusion (TAF) -- a breakdown in the distinction between performing an action and just thinking about it. Can you jinx someone just by thinking of something good (or bad) happening to them? Probably everybody has superstitious beliefs like these, or takes responsibility for thoughts that may randomly pass through their head as if they had actually acted them out.

Many cultures have a belief in the magical power of words, and many taboos arise out of those beliefs. It's also fairly common to believe that just talking or thinking about something will make it more or less likely for it to happen (knock wood!), even if you rationally know the belief to be false. People with OCD score high on TAF scales. People who don't have OCD and score high on TAF scales are also more likely than average to develop OCD later on. Of course, that doesn't mean that superstitions are an early sign of OCD. People who rate high in TAF are often just people who make life a little harder for themselves by taking on a feeling of responsibility for things they can't influence, or by taking on feelings of guilt for things they didn't actually do. Those are, in mild form, very similar to what a person with OCD feels.