City seeks name for future park The...
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City seeks name
for future park
The city of Newport Beach wants people to don their thinking caps
and come up with a name for a new 12-acre park behind the central
library on Avocado Avenue. When it’s built, the park will include an
amphitheater, seating area and native plants. The city will pay for
the park design, and volunteers are working to raise the estimated
$1.2 million needed for construction.
The city will accept park name suggestions through April 15, and
the names will be considered at a May 3 meeting of the parks, beaches
and recreation commission. Suggestions can be sent to recreation
services director Marie Knight by fax at (949)644-3155; by mail at
3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, CA 92663; or by e-mail at
Clinical trial tests surgical procedure
The first patient in a clinical trial of a surgical procedure to
prevent strokes was treated at Hoag Hospital Wednesday.
Surgeons are studying the effectiveness of a procedure called
carotid artery stenting that involves the implantation of a
mesh-metal tube -- or stent -- in the carotid artery as a method to
improve blood flow around plaque.
The procedure is less invasive than carotid endarterectomy, a
procedure in which surgeons remove plaque from the artery, according
to Hoag Hospital.
The clinical trial was designed to test the procedure on patients
who are at risk for strokes but have not suffered one. Stroke is the
third-leading cause of death in the United States and the nation’s
leading cause of disability. More than 700,000 Americans suffer
strokes annually, and about 90% of strokes are caused by poor blood
flow to the brain.
Three UCI students receive scholarships
Three UC Irvine students this week received the Barry M. Goldwater
Scholarship, which honors students interested in pursuing careers as
scientists, mathematicians and engineers. The number of winners was
the highest for UC Irvine since 1999.
The scholarship, established in 1986, went to junior Arthur Uy
Asuncion Jr., an information and computer science major; sophomore
Danielle L. Issa, a mechanical engineering major; and sophomore Vicky
W. Zhou, a biological sciences and dance major. Only 16 students in
California received the scholarship this year.
The Goldwater Scholarship, named after the former United States
senator, offers up to $7,500 a year for up to two years. Former UC
Irvine winners include Elizabeth Yanni in 2002, Benjamin Dilday in
2001 and Siavosh Bahrami in 2001.
University scientist
co-authors study
A UC Irvine cognitive scientist has co-authored a study on vision
training that appeared in last week’s Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
Barbara Anne Dosher, dean and professor of cognitive sciences at
UC Irvine, collaborated over the last six years with USC psychology
professor Zhong-Lin Lu. The professors tested six volunteers with
normal vision to determine whether the human eye filters out clutter
and focuses on a target as a single action or as two distinct ones.
The study determined that the two actions are separate, contrary to
popular belief.
“This research demonstrates, for the first time, the independence
of these two learning mechanisms and suggests new methods of training
for people who must pinpoint targets in busy images,” Dosher said.
The study, funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health, the
National Science Foundation and the Air Force Office of Scientific
Research, may alter the visual training methods of radiologists,
military pilots and other professionals who rely on pinpoint sight as
a part of their jobs.
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