Thursday 29 May 2014

Celebrity Sarees - Who is most beautiful celebrity in Saree?


Here are some cool and HOT pics of some of the Indian celebrities..

See and rate them, who is most beautiful in Saree?

Kareena in Red Saree


Karishma Kapoor in Saree


Kajol in Saree





Monday 26 May 2014

Salman and Other Bollywood Starts at Narendra Modi's Swearing in Ceremony


Salman and Other Bollywood Starts at Narendra Modi's Swearing in Ceremony May 26th 2014









Monday 19 May 2014

Facts Behind Telugu Hero PRABHAS Shoulder Surgery



Actor Prabhas has underwent a shoulder surgery.Gossips on Prabhas health condition has been doing rounds for months.And Finally Rajamouli Clarified some facts that Prabhas injured in Baahubali shooting and he has undergone a shoulder surgery a month ago.Though  'Baahubali' team tried to stay it as a secret, The news bust out with the actor attending a close relative's wedding with sling.

And He also said, we managed to keep it as a secret to avoid unnecessary gossips. The surgery was long due and that we planned it within the summer therefore the unit can also escape the summer heat.

"Oops.. He attended his cousin's marriage.. Where he was clicked with his sling... Sorry for the confusion caused..He is absolutely fine now and will be back in action in a month," Rajamouli tweeted

Rajamouli, however, did not reveal the reason for surgery apart from oral communication it had been long due. regardless of the reason can be, would like Young Rebel a speedy recovery!

Saturday 17 May 2014

Barack Obama Congratulated Narendra Modi



Gandhinagar, Gujarat: United States President Barack Obama on Friday called up Indian prime minister-designate Narendra Modi and congratulated him on his "emphatic election victory", officials said.

Mr Obama said that the largest democracy in the world has given a "decisive mandate" and that he wished that under Narendra Modi's leadership, India will contribute significantly at the global stage.

Both leaders discussed the India-US Strategic Partnership and the prevailing global economic situation.

This was the first high-level contact between Mr Modi and the US leadership ever since 2005 when the Gujarat chief minister had been denied a US visa due to his alleged complicity in the 2002 riots in the state.

Mr Obama joined a number of world leaders including British Prime Minister David Cameron, Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who have congratulated the Bharatiya Janata Party leader on the overwhelming win in the general elections.

Sunday 13 April 2014

Study : Green tea boosts working memory



A beverage with multiple benefits, green tea has inspired a number of research projects in recent years. One of the latest studies on the subject, that was recently published in the journal Psychopharmacology, offers additional evidence on how the drink can improve working memory and cognitive performance.

According to various studies, the antioxidant-rich beverage may help in maintaining weight and fighting bad cholesterol, in addition to improving memory and preventing cognitive decline. The latter benefits, in particular, were the subject of a key study by Chinese researcher Bai Yun that was previously published in Food Science and Molecular Nutrition and Food Research in June 2012.

Eager to evaluate the theories of green tea’s power to improve memory and to identify the mechanism behind it, researchers in Basel, Switzerland, asked a group of healthy volunteers to consume a soft drink with green tea extract before solving a series of working memory tasks. The test subjects’ brain activity was analysed using an MRI machine.
The researchers, led by Christoph Beglinger and Stefan Borgwardt, of the University Hospital of Basel and the Psychiatric University Clinics respectively, observed improved connectivity between the frontal and parietal brain regions in the test subjects who were given the green tea extract.

This improved connectivity between the two brain regions correlated with enhanced performance of the memory tasks. “Our findings suggest that green tea might increase the short-term synaptic plasticity of the brain,” Borgwardt indicated through the research.

In the future, the findings of the study could be used to assess the effectiveness of green tea extracts in treating dementia and other neuropsychiatric illnesses, according to the researchers.

How brain pays attention decoded



MIT neuroscientists have identified a brain circuit which is key to shifting our focus from one object to another.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology neuroscientists found how the brain achieves focused attention on faces or other objects.

They found that a part of the prefrontal cortex known as the inferior frontal junction (IFJ) controls visual processing areas that are tuned to recognise a specific category of objects.

Scientists know less about this type of attention, known as object-based attention, than spatial attention, which involves focusing on what's happening in a particular location.

"However, the new findings suggest that these two types of attention have similar mechanisms involving related brain regions," said Robert Desimone, the Doris and Don Berkey Professor of Neuroscience, director of MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research, and senior author of the paper

"The interactions are surprisingly similar to those seen in spatial attention. It seems like it's a parallel process involving different areas," Desimone said.

In both cases, the prefrontal cortex - the control center for most cognitive functions - appears to take charge of the brain's attention and control relevant parts of the visual cortex, which receives sensory input.

For spatial attention, that involves regions of the visual cortex that map to a particular area within the visual field.

In the new study, the researchers found that IFJ coordinates with a brain region that processes faces, known as the fusiform face area (FFA), and a region that interprets information about places, known as the parahippocampal place area (PPA).

The FFA and PPA were first identified in the human cortex by Nancy Kanwisher, the Walter A Rosenblith Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at MIT.

For this study, the researchers used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to scan human subjects as they viewed a series of overlapping images of faces and houses.

The researchers presented the overlapping streams at two different rhythms - two images per second and 1.5 images per second - allowing them to identify brain regions responding to those stimuli.

Each subject was told to pay attention to either faces or houses; because the houses and faces were in the same spot, the brain couldn't use spatial information to distinguish them.

When the subjects were told to look for faces, activity in the FFA and the IFJ became synchronised, suggesting that they were communicating with each other.

When the subjects paid attention to houses, the IFJ synchronised instead with the PPA, researchers found. 

Scientists reconstruct nose from lab-grown cartilage



There is hope for those who have lost their nose to cancer or in an accident.

Scientists have reported the first-ever successful nose reconstruction surgery using cartilage grown in the laboratory.

Cartilage cells were extracted from the patient's nasal septum, multiplied and expanded onto a collagen membrane.

The so-called engineered cartilage was then shaped according to the defect and implanted.

"The engineered cartilage has clinical results comparable to the current standard surgery. This new technique could help the body to accept the new tissue better and to improve the stability and functionality of the nostril," said Ivan Martin, professor for tissue engineering at the University Hospital of Basel.

A research team from the University of Basel in Switzerland, used a method called tissue engineering where cartilage is grown from patients' own cells.

This new technique was applied on five patients, aged 76 to 88 years, with severe defects on their nose after skin cancer surgery.

One year after the reconstruction, all five patients were satisfied with their ability to breathe as well as with the cosmetic appearance of their nose.

None of them reported any side effects.

"The method opens the way to using engineered cartilage for more challenging reconstructions in facial surgery such as the complete nose, eyelid or ear," said Martin.

Usually, grafts for reconstruction are taken from the nasal septum, the ear or the ribs and used to functionally reconstruct the nose.

However, this procedure is very invasive, painful and can lead to complications at the site of the excision due to the additional surgery.

The researchers extracted a small biopsy, isolated the cartilage cells (chondrocytes) and multiplied them.

The expanded cells were seeded onto a collagen membrane and cultured for two additional weeks, generating cartilage 40 times the size of the original biopsy.

The engineered grafts were then shaped according to the defect on the nostril and implanted.

The same engineered grafts are currently being tested in a parallel study for articular cartilage repair in the knee.

The results of the study are slated to appear in the journal The Lancet.