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    Human rights activist Chen Guangcheng has been allowed to leave China for a trip to the United States. Chen, with his wife and children, left China in a quiet departure on Saturday on board a US ...

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Pandora's Box  [DVD]

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  • NATO Summit Opens In Chicago

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  • Bomb Explodes Near UN Observers Chief In Syria

    A roadside bomb has exploded in Syria near a convoy carrying the head of the UN observer mission. The blast happened in the Douma district of Damascus, but no casualties have been reported. ...

  • Prisoner Katsav leaves jail for sons wedding

    Former president Moshe Katsav, serving seven years for a rape conviction, left Ma'asiyahu Prison in Ramle for the first time since beginning his sentence in December, in order to attend the ...

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I am very grateful to the assistance of the American Embassy and the promise of the Chinese government for protection of my rights as a citizen over the long term. I am very gratified to see the Chinese government has been dealing with the situation with restraint and calm.

Chen Guangcheng

The Chinese human rights activist was speaking after landing in the United States after his flight from Beijing.

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Featured Story

Brain circuitry different for women with anorexia and obesity

Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine may answer why some women become anorexic and others obese.

They found that reward circuits in the brain are sensitized in anorexic women and desensitized in obese women.

The findings also suggest that eating behavior is related to brain dopamine pathways involved in addictions.

Guido Frank, MD, assistant professor director of the Developmental Brain Research Program at the CU School of Medicine and his colleagues used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine brain activity in 63 women who were either anorexic or obese.

Scientists compared them to women considered "normal" weight. The participants were visually conditioned to associate certain shapes with either a sweet or a non-sweet solution and then received the taste solutions expectedly or unexpectedly. This task has been associated with brain dopamine function in the past.

They found that during these fMRI sessions, an unexpected sweet-tasting solution resulted in increased neural activation of reward systems in the anorexic patients and diminished activation in obese individuals. In rodents, food restriction and weight loss have been associated with greater dopamine-related reward responses in the brain.

"It is clear that in humans the brain's reward system helps to regulate food intake. The specific role of these networks in eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and, conversely, obesity, remains unclear," said Frank.

Scientists agree that more research is needed in this area.

The study was published in Neuropsychopharmacology. (ANI)

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