Thursday, April 11, 2013

First objective measure of pain discovered in brain scan patterns

Apr. 10, 2013 ? For the first time, scientists have been able to predict how much pain people are feeling by looking at images of their brains, according to a new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder.

The findings, published on?April 10 in the New England Journal of Medicine, may lead to the development of reliable methods doctors can use to objectively quantify a patient's pain. Currently, pain intensity can only be measured based on a patient's own description, which often includes rating the pain on a scale of one to 10. Objective measures of pain could confirm these pain reports and provide new clues into how the brain generates different types of pain.

The new research results also may set the stage for the development of methods using brain scans to objectively measure anxiety, depression, anger or other emotional states.

"Right now, there's no clinically acceptable way to measure pain and other emotions other than to ask a person how they feel," said Tor Wager, associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at CU-Boulder and lead author of the paper.

The research team, which included scientists from New York University, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Michigan, used computer data-mining techniques to comb through images of 114 brains that were taken when the subjects were exposed to multiple levels of heat, ranging from benignly warm to painfully hot. With the help of the computer, the scientists identified a distinct neurologic signature for the pain.

"We found a pattern across multiple systems in the brain that is diagnostic of how much pain people feel in response to painful heat." Wager said.

Going into the study, the researchers expected that if a pain signature could be found it would likely be unique to each individual. If that were the case, a person's pain level could only be predicted based on past images of his or her own brain. But instead, they found that the signature was transferable across different people, allowing the scientists to predict how much pain a person was being caused by the applied heat, with between 90 and 100 percent accuracy, even with no prior brain scans of that individual to use as a reference point.

The scientists also were surprised to find that the signature was specific to physical pain. Past studies have shown that social pain can look very similar to physical pain in terms of the brain activity it produces. For example, one study showed that the brain activity of people who have just been through a relationship breakup -- and who were shown an image of the person who rejected them -- is similar to the brain activity of someone feeling physical pain.

But when Wager's team tested to see if the newly defined neurologic signature for heat pain would also pop up in the data collected earlier from the heartbroken participants, they found that the signature was absent.

Finally, the scientists tested to see if the neurologic signature could detect when an analgesic was used to dull the pain. The results showed that the signature registered a decrease in pain in subjects given a painkiller.

The results of the study do not yet allow physicians to quantify physical pain, but they lay the foundation for future work that could produce the first objective tests of pain by doctors and hospitals. To that end, Wager and his colleagues are already testing how the neurologic signature holds up when applied to different types of pain.

"I think there are many ways to extend this study, and we're looking to test the patterns that we've developed for predicting pain across different conditions," Wager said. "Is the predictive signature different if you experience pressure pain or mechanical pain, or pain on different parts of the body?

"We're also looking towards using these same techniques to develop measures for chronic pain. The pattern we have found is not a measure of chronic pain, but we think it may be an 'ingredient' of chronic pain under some circumstances. Understanding the different contributions of different systems to chronic pain and other forms of suffering is an important step towards understanding and alleviating human suffering."

The study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National Institute of Mental Health and the National Science Foundation.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Colorado at Boulder.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Tor D. Wager, Lauren Y. Atlas, Martin A. Lindquist, Mathieu Roy, Choong-Wan Woo, Ethan Kross. An fMRI-Based Neurologic Signature of Physical Pain. New England Journal of Medicine, 2013; 368 (15): 1388 DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1204471

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/LPVTQQFlwpc/130410201839.htm

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Will Video Game Consoles Really Save AMD? - 24/7 Wall St.

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NYSE: AMD) is seeing some short-term profit taking so far on Tuesday, which frankly is of very little surprise. AMD shares rose a sharp 13% after a Bloomberg report that AMD was going to get the processor order for the newest Xbox from Microsoft Corporation. The news is obviously good news, but we genuinely question whether or not this saves AMD.

To say that AMD has been challenged would be the understatement of the decade. It is so far behind Intel in PC processors and behind ARM in mobile, and even NVIDIA is deemed to be ahead of AMD?s ATI graphics unit. The win for AMD would be a loss for IBM, and it might make AMD the vendor of choice for video game consoles as Sony has also slated the?AMD processor to run the upcoming?PS4 console.

While we wound consider the gaming console win as a welcoming sign, we would stress that game system processors have historically been using processors which would be slow if considered for new computers. In short, the size of the orders might not move the needle by enough when you consider that just last week a report from Gartner shows lower and lower shipments of desktop and notebook PCs from 2013 out to 2017.

One positive came out when Wells Fargo?s technology team predicted that AMD shares could double from current levels. That seemed like a stretch at the time, but Monday?s move makes that call look much more insightful now.

We have always warned that we may just have ridden the negative wagon on AMD for so long that we don?t know how to recognize a severe turning point. That seems doubtful as an admission, but it has to at least be thrown out there.

Jon C. Ogg

Source: http://247wallst.com/2013/04/09/will-video-game-consoles-really-save-amd/

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Texas college knife attack suspect to be in court

Dylan Quick, 20, is seen in an undated photo provided by the Harris County, Texas, Sheriff's Office. The Harris County Sheriff's Office said in a statement that Quick used a razor-type knife in a rampage Tuesday at the Lone Star College System's campus in Cypress, a Houston suburb, hurting more than a dozen people. Quick was charged Tuesday night, April 9, 2013 with three counts of aggravated assault. It wasn't immediately clear if additional charges would be filed, though he is scheduled to make his first court appearance Thursday. (AP Photo/Harris County Sheriff's Office)

Dylan Quick, 20, is seen in an undated photo provided by the Harris County, Texas, Sheriff's Office. The Harris County Sheriff's Office said in a statement that Quick used a razor-type knife in a rampage Tuesday at the Lone Star College System's campus in Cypress, a Houston suburb, hurting more than a dozen people. Quick was charged Tuesday night, April 9, 2013 with three counts of aggravated assault. It wasn't immediately clear if additional charges would be filed, though he is scheduled to make his first court appearance Thursday. (AP Photo/Harris County Sheriff's Office)

(AP) ? A man accused of stabbing more than a dozen people at a Houston-area college is set to make his first court appearance since being charged in the attack.

Dylan Quick was to be in a Houston courtroom Thursday morning.

The 20-year-old is charged with three counts of aggravated assault in the Tuesday attack at Lone Star Community College in Cypress.

Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia said Wednesday that Quick told authorities he had fantasized about stabbing people since he was 8 years old.

Officials say 14 people were wounded; all are expected to survive.

Garcia says Quick indicated he had been planning the attack for some time. Garcia says authorities are still trying to determine a reason for the attack and that the investigation is ongoing.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-11-US-Texas-College-Stabbing/id-485dfb957074435c8f7ab679929e7511

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Cookie Monster, Elmo get in Times Square trouble

An Elmo character poses for photos in New York's Times Square, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A string of arrests in the last few months has brought unwelcome attention to the growing number of people, mostly poor immigrants, who make a living by donning character outfits, roaming Times Square and charging tourists a few dollars to pose with them in photos. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

An Elmo character poses for photos in New York's Times Square, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A string of arrests in the last few months has brought unwelcome attention to the growing number of people, mostly poor immigrants, who make a living by donning character outfits, roaming Times Square and charging tourists a few dollars to pose with them in photos. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

A Super Mario character, left, uses a woman's mobile phone camera to photographer her with a pair of Elmo characters in New York's Times Square, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A string of arrests in the last few months has brought unwelcome attention to the growing number of people, mostly poor immigrants, who make a living by donning character outfits, roaming Times Square and charging tourists a few dollars to pose with them in photos. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Elmo and two Hello Kitty characters pose for photos with a little girl in New York's Times Square, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A string of arrests in the last few months has brought unwelcome attention to the growing number of people, mostly poor immigrants, who make a living by donning character outfits, roaming Times Square and charging tourists a few dollars to pose with them in photos. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

A woman gives a monetary tip to characters in New York's Times Square after she photographed the girl with them, Tuesday, April 9, 2013. A string of arrests in the last few months has brought unwelcome attention to the growing number of people, mostly poor immigrants, who make a living by donning character outfits, roaming Times Square and charging tourists a few dollars to pose with them in photos. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

(AP) ? Cookie Monster stands accused of shoving a 2-year-old. Super Mario was charged with groping a woman. And Elmo was booked for berating tourists with anti-Semitic slurs.

Times Square is crawling with entrepreneurs who dress up as pop-culture characters and try to make a few bucks posing for photos with visitors to the big city. But some of these characters are unlike anything you've seen on "Sesame Street" or at Disney World.

They smoke, they use foul language, and they can be aggressive. At least three of them have been arrested in the past seven months.

"He was using words that were really bad," said Parmita Kurada of Stamford, Conn., who told police she got into a dispute this week with a man in a Cookie Monster costume who demanded $2 for posing with her 2-year-old son, Samay.

Kurada said that when she told the Cookie Monster that her husband needed to get cash, the shaggy blue creature pushed the boy and began calling her and the child obscene names.

"It was very scary for us, and I was crying. I didn't want to provoke him, so I said, 'We'll give you the money, but stop yelling!'" she said.

Osvaldo Quiroz-Lopez, 33, was charged with assault, child endangerment and aggressive begging. His lawyer did not immediately return a call for comment.

Asked by a WNBC-TV reporter why he no longer likes the character he sees on "Sesame Street," little Samay said: "Because Cookie Monster give me boo-boo."

In the wake of the latest arrest, the bustling "Crossroads of the World" was filled Tuesday with performers, including multiple versions of Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Hello Kitty, a Transformer robot, Lady Liberty, Super Mario and Elmo.

Many of them are immigrants trying to eke out a living in what appear to be knockoff costumes.

As street performers protected by the First Amendment, they are free to roam Times Square and work for tips that average between $2 and $5 a photo as long as they don't block traffic, sell merchandise or demand payment, police say. That's a ticketable offense that can cost about $60.

"I don't think they should charge, but if they're unemployed or homeless, and this is the only way they can make money, it's OK," said Lauren Larcara of Oakland, N.J., who posed with a torch-carrying Statue of Liberty.

Laura Vanegas, a 45-year-old native of Ecuador, changes into her Liberty robes and applies copper-green face paint behind the Times Square military recruiting station. She said she picks up $30 to $50 on her eight-hour shift.

Steve Crass, dressed as a robot in fluorescent red and white plastic panels, said he has made as much as $280 during his six-hour stint in front of Toys R Us. He acknowledged: "Some of the characters are a little too aggressive."

Police spokesman Paul Browne said in an email that the department has had "occasional issues with the 'faux paws' in Times Square, but they're nominal."

The case against the Super Mario charged with groping is still pending. The Elmo accused of an anti-Semitic rant pleaded guilty in September to disorderly conduct and was sentenced to two days of community service.

City Council Speaker Christine Quinn called the Cookie Monster case "just horrible" and said lawmakers have been looking into how to regulate the characters. But she noted the issue is, well, fuzzy.

"It's very challenging legally because dressing up in a costume and walking around Times Square is, we believe, a First Amendment-protected activity," said Quinn, a candidate to be New York's next mayor.

Similar cases of misbehavior by costumed performers have been reported in Hollywood.

Disney did not respond to a request for comment, while the Sesame Workshop, the organization behind "Sesame Street," said it has not authorized such uses of any its characters in any city and is looking into what actions it can take.

Anthony Elia, a New York lawyer in the intellectual-property field, said the entertainment groups probably have a case for trademark infringement, but "the challenge probably would be getting a bunch of self-employed entrepreneurial individuals to stop."

It's not the easiest way to make a living. On a day when temperatures pushed 80, they sweated in their outfits, coming out from under their oversized costume heads only to grab a hot dog or a smoke. When one posed for a photo, two or three others dashed over and joined in.

"Want to take a picture?" a furry red Elmo asked a tourist. Moments later, he declined to speak to a reporter, saying through his costume, "I no speak English."

A Minnie Mouse offered a toddler in a stroller her hand and positioned herself at the handlebar. A Super Mario rushed over to join her.

"She said, 'Can you give us money?'" said the child's mother, Melanie Somogyi of Hamilton, Ontario. "And they grabbed the stroller!"

___

AP reporters Colleen Long, Karen Matthews and Jennifer Peltz in New York contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-09-Times%20Square%20Characters/id-a810c52f83c84496a7b5bdfe2616033c

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Bloomberg Develops Gun Scorecard; OFA Gets Cyber-Squatted; Pat Miletich, Liz Cheney for Senate?

Click hereto read online and see our archives.

WHAT'S NEWS

  • NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg (I) "is ratcheting up pressure on lawmakers by launching a new system to grade them based on their votes and statements on gun issues" (Washington Post)
  • "An arbitrator has denied" Organizing for Action's "effort to obtain the domain name organizingforaction.net, registered by a quick-moving computer technician in Castle Rock, Colo., on Jan. 18, when the news broke that Obama's former advisors were launching the group" (Los Angeles Times). Pres. Obama himself "will appear at a cozy reception for fewer than 65 guests with tickets priced at $32,400 per couple at the Manhattan home of movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and his designer wife Georgina Chapman on May 13" (New York Post)
  • NJ GOV '13: "One New Jersey," a group "formed to push back" on Gov. Chris Christie?s (R) record, "is launching a $500,000 cable ad buy in the state" today (Politico)
  • Boston Mayor '13: City Councilor Felix Arroyo "is expected to launch a bid" today, "making him the first Latino candidate to run for the office" and "the sixth major candidate" in the race (Boston Globe)
  • IA SEN: Mixed martial artist/ESPN commentator/ex-UFC champion Pat Miletich (R) "says he is considering a bid," but "said it was possible he could run as an independent." He "tweeted last week that people could pencil his name in next year for Senate, adding 'Bruce Braley cannot win that seat.'" (Quad City Times)
  • KY SEN: Senate Min. Leader Mitch McConnell (R) raised $1.8M in the 1stQ and has $8.6M CoH (AP)
  • LA SEN: Ex-Rep. Jeff Landry (R) said the launch of his super PAC "doesn?t necessarily close other doors for his political future. But he emphasized that the super PAC is a long-term project, which most likely lowers the odds of a challenge" to Sen. Mary Landrieu (D) (Politico)
  • MA SEN: Reps. Ed Markey (D) and Stephen Lynch (D) "sparred on drone strikes, student debt, health care and campaign spending during a debate Monday" (AP). Meanwhile, state Rep. Dan Winslow (R) filed a request with the FEC Monday "for guidance on whether his campaign can accept contributions from same-sex married couples as they are allowed to for straight couples" (Time)
  • WY SEN: Dick Cheney daughter Liz Cheney (R) "is still seriously considering running," although over the weekend, Sen. Mike Enzi (R) "told a meeting of the GOP state party committee that he is looking forward to running for re-election" (Daily Caller)
  • ME GOV: '10 candidate Eliot Cutler (I) "is headed to D.C. in May to raise money from a pretty ritzy list" of DC lobbyists. The invitation "lists about 20 former Carter Administration officials, lobbyists and Democratic Party and campaign officials as 'hosts.'" (Bangor Daily News)
  • NM GOV: Gov. Susana Martinez (R) "has stockpiled" nearly $1.5M for her re-election campaign, "far more" than AG Gary King (D), who has $103K CoH (AP)
  • PA GOV: Rep. Allyson Schwartz (D) "launched her campaign" Monday, declaring that Gov. Tom Corbett's (R) "failed leadership" has crippled the PA economy. "Her staff said that $3.1 million in her congressional campaign account would be transferred" to her GOV campaign cmte (Philadelphia Inquirer).
  • WH '16: Ex-Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) "will speak at the 13th Annual Spring Kick Off of the Iowa Faith & Freedom Coalition" April 15 in Urbandale, IA. His "remarks will focus on the future of the Republican Party and what must be done to ensure our party's future viability" (Sioux City Journal)

NUMBER BRUNCHING

  • According to a new CNN/ORC Int'l poll of nat'l adults, conducted 4/5-7, 51% approve of the way Obama is handling his job as POTUS, while 47% disapprove. In the previous poll, conducted 3/15-17, 47% approved of Obama, and 50% disapproved (release).

OUR CALL

Hotline editors weigh in on the stories that drive the day


? Schwartz's decision to jump into the PA GOV race emphasizes just how vulnerable Democrats think Gov. Tom Corbett is. A favorite of leadership, Schwartz has seen her power grow in the House Democratic Caucus, but she's giving up her increasingly prominent role in DC for a shot at the Governor's Mansion, even though she could face multiple credible foes in the Democratic primary.

? With Dems desperate to avoid a primary in SD, it appears Brendan Johnson's supporters have determined it's more important to claim frontrunner status (and potentially head off former Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin) than to avoid charges of political nepotism. Nearly all of the state's Dem leaders have been approached by the "Draft Brendan" campaign, and the rapid gathering of support suggests the movement has been in the works for some time. If Herseth Sandlin is serious about a bid, she doesn't have long to make her own show of strength.

? The looming CO-06 battle between Rep. Mike Coffman (R) and Andrew Romanoff (D) looks like an early front-runner to be 2014's most expensive congressional race. It has plenty of key ingredients so far: a closely divided electorate, a big media market, a state with plenty of up-ballot activity, and, most importantly, two seasoned candidates who are both fundraising like incumbents, with each bringing in over $500,000 in the first quarter of 2013.

HAIR OF THE DOG

FRESH BREWED BUZZ

  • Sen. Tim Johnson (D-SD) "became the latest prominent Democrat to declare his support Monday for same-sex marriage," leaving "only three of 53 Democrats in the Senate" who do not: Sens. Mary Landrieu (D-LA), Mark Pryor (D-AR), and Joe Manchin (D-WV) (Sioux Falls Argus Leader)
  • "Right now I?m grateful to live in a city, in a state, in a country where I strongly support my mayor, my governor and my president and my senators and my representative. If at some point that weren?t true and I thought I could make a meaningful and measurably greater impact, you know, I?d have to ask and answer that question." -- Chelsea Clinton, on possibly running for office (New York Daily News)
  • "The Emanuel brothers -- Ari, Rahm and Zeke -- crack Town & Country?s new list of America?s most powerful families ranking ahead of the Kennedys, McCains and Pritzkers. (The trio sits at No. 4 while the Bush family?s perched on top.)" (New York Post)
  • "If she were here today, she would have read 'Fifty Shades of Grey.'" -- Susan Ford Bales, on her mother/ex-FLOTUS Betty Ford (Grand Rapids Press)
  • "With the Alaska GOP set to meet Monday evening to decide the fate of party chairwoman Debbie Brown of Kasilof, she has seized the Republican headquarters in Anchorage and is threatening to arrest anyone who tries to enter the building" (Alaska Dispatch)
  • "I think you?ll see, hopefully, a chastened Supreme Court is not going to make the same mistake in the (current same-sex marriage) cases as they did in Roe v. Wade" -- Ex-Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) (Des Moines Register)
  • Ex-Rep. Merrill Cook (R-UT) "will participate in a mock hearing with several other former Congress members to explore the subject of UFOs. Cook says he skeptical, but open minded" (Salt Lake Tribune)
  • "Candidate says Haitian Vodou being used to get her to drop out of North Miami mayoral race" (Miami Herald)
  • "Bob Seger fan, 79, ready to see rocker after awakening from five-year coma" (Flint Journal)
  • "I'm going to go there just like I went to Calcutta and Japan ... to sense the dynamism. They're building stuff, 5,000 miles of high-speed rail, and 100 years ago the British were feeding them opium." -- CA Gov. Jerry Brown (D), who left CA for China on Monday, talking recently to the Financial Times of London (Sacramento Bee)
  • "TaB turns 50 and those who love the fizzy diet cola celebrate" (Lexington Herald-Leader)

SWIZZLE CHALLENGE

  • Zachary Taylor and Franklin Pierce are the two generals that served in the Mexican-American War and later became President.
  • The winner is Sam Kaplan , and here's his Swizzle Challenge: "Which Presidents of the United States were generals in the Civil War?" The 3rd correct e-mailer gets to submit the next question.

NJ'S EARLY BIRD SPECIALS

SHOT...

"I don't want to pay for a sex change operation. I'm not interested. I like being a boy." -- GA SEN candidate/Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA) (Barrow County Times)

...CHASER

"I Enjoy Being a Girl" -- Flower Drum Song, Rodgers & Hammerstein

Sarah Mimms, Editor
Quinn McCord, Guest Editor

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bloomberg-develops-gun-scorecard-ofa-gets-cyber-squatted-090038631--politics.html

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Biden: Threats to block gun bill 'embarrassing'

(AP) ? Vice President Joe Biden says he refuses to believe a small group of senators will block a vote on gun legislation.

The vice president says it would be "embarrassing" if a filibuster would be the climax of a national tragedy like the shooting at Connecticut's Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Biden spoke to law enforcement officers at the White House just before Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced he would push for a vote Thursday. He encouraged the police and sheriff's deputies to go talk to their lawmakers in uniform to encourage passage of the bill.

Biden vowed to win the fight on guns, even if this vote is blocked. He said Americans won't stand for inaction after Sandy Hook.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-04-09-US-Biden-Gun-Control/id-a63556e591b14508aa157f616dcb0907

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Rutgers board member: Called for Rice's firing

Carmine Ralph Cicurillo questions Rutgers University President Robert Barchi over the expenses of athletic programs as Barchi addresses a town hall meeting Monday, April 8, 2013, in Newark, N.J., Barchi announced Monday that Rutgers officials are reviewing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, and the university is planning to hire a consultant to do an independent review of how the university hired Rice. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Carmine Ralph Cicurillo questions Rutgers University President Robert Barchi over the expenses of athletic programs as Barchi addresses a town hall meeting Monday, April 8, 2013, in Newark, N.J., Barchi announced Monday that Rutgers officials are reviewing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, and the university is planning to hire a consultant to do an independent review of how the university hired Rice. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Rutgers University President Robert Barchi addresses a town hall meeting Monday, April 8, 2013, in Newark, N.J., Barchi announced Monday that Rutgers officials are reviewing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, and the university is planning to hire a consultant to do an independent review of how the university hired Rice. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Rutgers University professor Beryl Satter, Ph.D., interrupts president Robert Barchi as he addresses a town hall meeting Monday, April 8, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Barchi announced Monday that Rutgers officials are reviewing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, and the university is planning to hire a consultant to do an independent review of how the university hired Rice.(AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Rutgers University professor Beryl Satter, left, Ph.D., is applauded as she interrupts president Robert Barchi as he addresses a strategic planning gathering Monday, April 8, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Barchi announced Monday that Rutgers officials are reviewing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, and the university is planning to hire a consultant to do an independent review of how the university hired Rice.(AP Photo/Mel Evans)

Rutgers University President Robert Barchi addresses a town hall meeting Monday, April 8, 2013, in Newark, N.J. Barchi announced Monday that Rutgers officials are reviewing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, and the university is planning to hire a consultant to do an independent review of how the university hired Rice.(AP Photo/Mel Evans)

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) ? A member of the Rutgers University Board of Governors says he called for ex-basketball coach Mike Rice to be fired in December.

Board member Mark Hershorn says in a statement that he was shown a video of Rice kicking and shoving players and using gay slurs as he yelled at them on Dec. 4, soon after the university was given the video by a former employee.

He says former athletic director Tim Pernetti showed him the video. Hershorn says he told Pernetti that if the video was authentic, Rice needed to go.

Later that month, Rice was suspended. It was only when the video was made public last week that Rice was fired.

Pernetti has since resigned. He has said his "first instinct" was also to fire Rice.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

Rutgers officials are scrutinizing practice videos of all sports to see if any coach engaged in behavior like the type that cost men's basketball coach Mike Rice his job, the university president announced Monday. The inquiry into Rice and how university officials responded is also going deeper as the school announced that it plans to hire a consultant to conduct an independent review.

University President Robert Barchi, speaking Monday during a town hall meeting on the school's Newark campus, said that he wants any instances of bullying or homophobic language to be reported immediately.

He also reiterated that he wished he had viewed the video where Rice ? whom Gov. Chris Christie on Monday called an "animal" ? shoved players and called them gay slurs when it first surfaced in November, saying he would have fired Rice then.

Rice was fired last week only after the video became public. Athletic Director Tim Pernetti, an assistant basketball coach and the university's top lawyer also resigned last week, while some Rutgers faculty members and others called for Barchi to step down, too.

Meanwhile, Christie on Monday defended Barchi's performance while blasting Rice's behavior. He also criticized the reaction of those who knew about it and did not fire the coach months ago, when the video was given to university officials and viewed by ? at least ? Athletic Director Tim Pernetti, university interim counsel John Wolf and Mark Hershhorn, the chairman of the university Board of Governors' athletics committee.

"They were wrong not to come to the conclusion that Coach Rice needed to be fired immediately," Christie said at a news conference.

Hershorn's lawyer, Jennifer Joseph, said the governor is wrong about Hershorn. Hershorn immediately called for Rice to be fired after he saw the video in December, she said, declining to say where he made the recommendation.

While the governor had issued statements previously, it was the first time Christie took questions about the scandal at the state's flagship public university. The Republican governor added that had he been aware of the issues earlier he would have used his "power of persuasion" to try to get Rice fired then.

He said he viewed the video not only as a governor but as the father of a college athlete. His son Andrew plays baseball at Princeton.

"You're talking about kids being miserably treated by the guy who determined whether they keep their scholarship or not," Christie said. He said the video cost the coach his credibility with young athletes and their families.

"What parent would let this animal back into their living room to try to recruit their son after this video?" he said.

Christie said it was a mistake for Barchi, who took office in September, not to watch the video last year when he first was told about it. But he said leaders of large organizations must delegate some matters and that the mistake was not a firing offense.

It was Pernetti's job to know what the coach was doing, Christie said. According to a settlement the university provided to The Associated Press on Monday, Pernetti is receiving $1.25 million as he departs, along with perks ranging from health insurance for more than two years to a $12,000 annual car allowance until next year and his university-issued iPad.

Rutgers announced Monday that it was commissioning an independent review of Rice's conduct and the way the university responded to it. The board of governors will meet Thursday to discuss that.

Also Monday, board chairman Ralph Izzo said that one board member ? Hershhorn ? had seen the video in December and that it was not shown to other members. The topic of the coach's conduct was discussed at a committee meeting in December, but it was not discussed at the whole-board meeting that month.

Joseph, Hershorn's lawyer, said he voiced his concerns about what he believed was "abusive and demeaning" behavior "quickly, responsibly and diligently."

Before hearing Hershorn's account, state Senate President Stephen Sweeney called on the board member to resign. "Any trustee or member of the board of governors who witnessed the tape at any point before it was publicly aired, and took no action, should be removed or resign immediately," he said in a statement.

The scandal has prompted the FBI to investigate whether a former Rutgers basketball employee asked for money from Rutgers in exchange for not taking the videos public, a person familiar with the investigation told The Associated Press on Sunday.

Asked about the FBI inquiry on Monday, Barchi said the agency wasn't called but came "on their own."

As the investigations mount, Christie said he did not believe that state lawmakers should have an inquiry of their own, saying Rutgers is investigating and that holding hearings would "continue reputational damage" to the school.

Assembly Speaker Sheila Oliver, who has called for hearings said "the taxpayers, students, faculty, administrators, parents, alumni and other constituents" deserve to know what happened.

Meanwhile, Rutgers is turning to former dean Carl Kirschner to run its athletic department on an interim basis while it conducts a search for someone to take the job permanently.

It's the second time that Kirschner will run the program. He took over at the start of 2009 after Robert Mulcahy was fired, and held the role for four months, stepping down when Pernetti took over.

___

Zezima reported from Newark. Associated Press writers Geoff Mulvihill, Tim Sullivan and Tom Canavan also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-08-US-Rutgers-President/id-43192c26ded14393a0b95733766d1a5c

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