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When you were younger, did you get oranges in your Christmas stockings? Did you just continue the tradition without asking why? Well, there are potentially multiple reasons behind this practice.

The Silver Lining in Disappointment

Dec. 17th, 2025 10:00 pm
[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Kristen French

Disappointment stings. But this feeling may be more useful than you might think. It seems to help mice change their behavior so that they can avoid similar outcomes in the future, a skill essential to survival for many living things.

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Scientists from the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) Graduate University have found that disappointment actually triggers specific changes in the brains of mice that predict adaptive behavior. The findings, which were published in the journal Nature Communications, could help scientists understand a variety of diseases and disorders, from addiction to obsessive compulsive disorder to Parkinson’s disease.

“The brain mechanisms behind changing behaviors have remained elusive, because adapting to a given scenario is very neurologically complex,” said co-author Jeffery Wickens, head of the Neurobiology Research Unit at OIST, in a statement. “It requires interconnected activity across multiple areas of the brain.”

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Read more: “Where Is My Mind?

Wickens and his colleagues trained mice to navigate a virtual maze, meting out a sugary reward when the rodents were successful. They then switched the route, so the mice lost the sweet treat. Using an advanced imaging technique known as two-photon microscopy, they monitored the release of neurotransmitters in the mouse brains in real time as they navigated the maze.

When the goodie the mice had come to expect suddenly went poof, the scientists observed acetylcholine flooding the striatum, a part of the brain associated with movement and reward. The greater the release of neurotransmitter, the more likely the mice were to change their behavior, trying out new routes through the maze. This wasn’t the case, however, during the training phase when they made a wrong choice—only after they had learned to expect the sugary treat.

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To confirm their findings, the researchers then turned off the acetylcholine source in the mice—by delivering a specific receptor to their brains using a virus and then activating it—and tried the experiment again. Without the deluge of acetylcholine saturating their brains, the mice were far less likely to hunt for alternative ways to solve the maze when the game changed.

“Our results demonstrated the importance of acetylcholine in breaking habits and enabling new choices to be made,” said co-author Gideon Sarpong, a neuroscientist at OIST.

Previous work had already shown that brain cells that release acetylcholine were involved in behavioral flexibility, but exactly how this worked was unclear. The findings could help scientists better understand the specific roles the neurotransmitter plays in certain neurological disorders.

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Maybe this knowledge could even help lessen the bitter sting of disappointments, making feelings of defeat just a little sweeter.

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Lead image: Simple Line / Shutterstock

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sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)
[personal profile] sovay
Last night on a snow-salted suburban road I saw a deer bound suddenly through the splash of the headlights, followed a moment later by what must have been a pair of coyotes because it's been centuries since there were wolves in this part of the world. It was so folkloric, I expected to see riders the next moment, or the moon. After days of sleepless free-fall and headache it hurt to breathe through, I spent much of this afternoon unconscious, which was terrible for my exposure to daylight but produced vivid dreams only occasionally suggesting a surrealist facsimile of same, such as the second-story view onto a green quadrangle where a policeman was bleeding out milk. Hestia is trying to climb through my arms as I type in her best doctorly fashion. In nearly half a lifetime of chronic illness, I don't think I have ever felt this daily-basis bad.

The Life Preserver

Dec. 17th, 2025 09:39 pm
[syndicated profile] murderbot_ao3_feed

Posted by DuckInOuterSpace

by

A spaceship and a transit station pass in the night, or well, what passes for the night when you're two machines floating through outer space.

Words: 128, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English

Series: Part 17 of DuckInOuterSpace's Murderbot December Drabbles

Okay so more context

Dec. 17th, 2025 09:29 pm
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
(Re: the previous entry.)

Dragonslayer Ornstein & Executioner Smough (also known as Oreo and S'mores, Biggie and Smalls, Pikachu and Snorlax, Rodgers and Hammerstein, and any other name the fandom can come up with) are one of the most iconic boss fights in the entire Dark Souls series.

There are much harder ones in later games (and in the DLC), but they're still legendary and still regarded as a Serious boss fight.

They're also a famous mid-game difficulty spike and cause of rage quitting. Conversely, if you can get through O&S, people often say you should have the skills to beat the rest of the base game.

The major issue is that it's a duo boss fight, with one agile speedster (Ornstein) who can zip most of the way across the room in a single move, and also throws lightning, and one heavyweight bruiser (Smough) who is slower but not that slow -- he has a charge attack to close distance fast that hits like a freight train -- and does huge amounts of damage.

So for the first phase of the fight, you have to try to keep track of where they both are simultaneously (not to mention where you are in relation to the room, so you don't back yourself into a corner and get trapped) and constantly manoeuvre to try to be able to get in a hit on one without being hit by the other.

If you kill one of them, the fight goes into a second phase where the surviving one absorbs some of their powers (so if it's Smough, he gets lightning, while if it's Ornstein he gets sized up and picks up part of Smough's moveset) and also restarts with a full and vastly increased health bar. Though there is a general consensus that the second phase is more manageable than the first phase simply because you're not having to fight two bosses at the same time.

Illustrative example of someone doing the fight:



(You can summon an NPC or other human players to try to help you, but the bosses get extra health to compensate and it's still tough. And also I have been having enormous fun trying to beat all the bosses without summons so far, and am averse to the extra complications and unpredictability of having more people -- human or NPC -- in the mix while I try to figure out a fight. Though I've also had enormous fun being a summons for other people on boss fights, so zero disrespect to people summoning*, it's an excellent game mechanic.)

As I may have mentioned once or twice, my brain has huge difficulty tracking multiple moving objects (which is why I can't drive or cycle on the road) and I have the reaction speed of a slime mould.

So yeah. I knew O&S are the big mid-game stopper and I was very aware that this could potentially be the point where I hit a wall and the game became flatly impossible for me. Or at least where I'd have to summon to get through it.

And that did not happen. I solo-ed O&S.

It took multiple sessions over multiple days before I mastered it, but that's standard for me on DS boss fights. And I had SO MUCH FUN. It's SUCH A COOL FIGHT.

I did a thing that was a real achievement for me and I am very proud, and especially given the shitshow this year has been, I'll take it.

{*Necessary disclaimer only because Dark Souls fandom has historically had a section who are toxic as fuck and would like you to know that you didn't really beat the game if you summoned or used magic or whatthefuckever else they disapprove of.}

2025 Deadline Has Passed - What Next

Dec. 18th, 2025 10:17 am
yuletidemods: A hippo lounges with laptop in hand, peering at the screen through a pair of pince-nez and smiling. A text bubble with a heart emerges from the screen. The hippo dangles a computer mouse from one toe. By Oro. (Default)
[personal profile] yuletidemods posting in [community profile] yuletide_admin
The deadline has passed, and the main collection is temporarily closed.

Congratulations to everyone who has posted! Pat yourself on the back, take a breath, and then please check wordcount, formatting, html; check that you've uploaded the correct version, and that all your text is actually there. You can get to what you've submitted from your Statistics page, or from your Works in Collections. Your story should be marked as "complete" rather than one or more of multiple chapters yet to come.

To all who didn't make it this year: it happens, and we hope you enjoy the collection reveals.

To all who are still working on beta jobs, treats, or pinch hits: thank you and good luck!


Pinch hits coming!!
Post-deadline pinch hits will be available soon at [community profile] yuletide_pinch_hits. This next round will be due at 9 AM UTC, 22 December.

See what time that is in YOUR timezone
See countdown

Beta requests
We have outstanding beta requests on the Yuletide Discord (please see the #hippo-want-ads channel), and more betas are always welcome at the Dreamwidth beta post.


There is also an Away from Keyboard post up on the participant community, for you to (optionally) let your author know if it'll be a while before you can read your gift.


If there seems to be an issue with your posted work, we'll contact you via the email address associated with your AO3 account. Please check you can access that!


Schedule, Rules, & Collection | Contact Mods | Participant DW | Participant LJ | Pinch Hits on DW | Discord | Tag set | Tag set app

Please either comment logged-in or sign a name. Unsigned anonymous comments will be left screened.

another benediction

Dec. 17th, 2025 08:56 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I got a birthday card from my aunt today, my dad's sister.

Inside it says

Wishing you joy from your job.
Wishing you joy from your friends.
Wishing you joy from your family.

Hope you and your Mom and Dad can be together in 2026.

Aww. Really sweet. She's good and I should be better at keeping in touch.

[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Molly Glick

Social media often feels like a minefield—dodging spiteful and incendiary posts when you’re simply trying to, say, scroll through cute cat photos or seek out Reddit advice on vacuum cleaners.

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Fortunately, the internet isn’t necessarily brimming with trolls. People actually tend to vastly overestimate their prevalence, according to online survey results recently published in PNAS Nexus.

Stanford University researchers asked more than 1,000 adults in the United States about their perceptions of the social media trolls behind “severely toxic” comments, which were defined as “hateful, aggressive, and disrespectful” posts that could encourage people to exit an online discussion. The study volunteers were recruited strategically so that the participant pool mirrored proportions of certain demographics, including gender and race, reported in the 2020 U.S. census.

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Read more: “Why Your Brain Hates Other People

Participants estimated how many Reddit users post severely toxic comments—on average, people guessed that number to be about 43 percent. In reality, this figure is closer to around 3 percent, a study presented at the 2023 Association for Computing Machinery Web Conference found. Survey respondents also speculated on the share of Facebook users that circulate fake news, proposing 47 percent on average. But the reality is around 8.5 percent, according to a 2019 Science Advances paper.

Meanwhile, survey respondents were nearly right on the money when guessing the portion of all Reddit postings that are churned out by trolls. They proposed on average that around 38 percent of all Reddit comments—toxic or not—come from these mischievous users, when the reality is closer to around a third, or more than 559 million comments over the 2023 study’s year-and-a-half duration.

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The research team also shared accurate data on toxic social media users with some participants, and they reported feeling more positive and more likely to believe that “the character of their fellow U.S. citizens was in less moral decline” than the participants who weren’t given the true information. This group was also more likely to recognize that most people don’t want harmful content to go viral on social media.

“This particular, widely held misperception about social media toxicity can have serious consequences, leaving participants feeling negatively, with higher pessimism about the moral state of their fellow citizens, and with more pluralistic ignorance about how much others desire harmful online content,” the authors wrote.

But this potentially perilous mismatch can be fixed, they noted, by “teaching people that social media can overrepresent the views of vocal accounts that post disproportionately often.”

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So don’t let your conspiratorial uncle, or any other troll, cloud your conception of your favorite platforms—and humanity more broadly.

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Lead image: eamesBot / Shutterstock

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[syndicated profile] nautilus_feed

Posted by Devin Reese

Animals are known to change seasonally with their environments. For example, an Arctic fox that sports a snow-white coat in winter sheds to wear a brown-gray summer coat. These changes are triggered by daylight cues that alter the action of foxes’ pigment-producing genes.

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While operating on a different time scale, some butterflies also undergo seasonal changes in their coloration. And a recent study in Functional Ecology shows that color changes are just the tip of the iceberg—in at least one butterfly species, they’re accompanied by shifts in behavior and visual perception.

Researchers from the University of Arkansas and Cornell University studied seasonal changes in buckeye butterflies (Junonia coenia) from Arkansas tallgrass prairies. Because these butterflies live for just a couple of weeks as adults, the changes occur across generations. Buckeyes hatching in summer sport notably lighter-color wings than butterflies hatching in fall. The summer individuals were also known to have higher activity levels and to disperse further than the fall-hatched ones.

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Read more: “Do Butterflies Challenge the Meaning of Species?

From May to November across three years, the scientists assessed buckeye butterfly coloration, wing pattern, behavior, and activity level. From butterfly heads collected once per month, tissue was removed and sampled for RNA (to determine expression of genes). The results showed differential expression of several genes across seasons. As days got shorter and cooler in September, buckeyes emerged with darker wings and spent more time basking in the sun. Those observable changes were accompanied by shifts in gene expression related to eye pigmentation, circadian rhythms, and temperature stress. 

While it’s too early to specify how those genetic shifts manifest in butterfly perceptions, it’s fair to say that there’s more going on seasonally than what meets the eye. “Not only are common buckeye butterflies interacting with their world differently depending on the time of year, but they probably see the world differently at these times of year, too,” University of Arkansas biologist and co-author Grace Hirzel said in a statement.

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Whether or not other animals experience seasonal sensory changes in tandem with changes to their bodies and physiology remains to be determined. But such sensory shifts may explain observed changes in behavior. “Changes in sensory system development like we found in the buckeye may be a common strategy used by many animals to survive shifting seasonal conditions,” added Hirzel.

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Lead image: Dr. Thomas G. Barnes, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service / Wikimedia Commons

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yourlibrarian: Three for the Memories (THREE-Three Default - yourlibrarian)
[personal profile] yourlibrarian posting in [community profile] threeforthememories


3 for the Memories' 2025 session will be open for posts on January 3, 2026 and will run for 3 weeks until January 24. Do let others know about us, as anyone can participate by just joining the community.

Just a reminder of how the event runs:

1) Three photos only per person during each annual session. Members are encouraged to discuss the reason for their choices.

2) Photos can be hosted at Dreamwidth or elsewhere, and should not be larger than 800 px width or height.

3) All three photos should be in the same post. Cut tags should be placed after the first photo.

3 for the Memories is not a competition, and entries are not being judged. Rather, participants are encouraged to share photos they took in 2024 that they find meaningful in some way or which represent how they experienced the year.

Feel free to drop any questions about the community or how the event runs in comments!

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