DELFT, The Netherlands, April 28 /PRNewswire/ -- TASS, the vehicle safety specialist, is unleashing a rebranded website at http://www.tass-safe.com. The new web supports the launch of the company's new MADYMO V7.0 software. MADYMO is the industry-standard software for occupant safety design and virtual crash testing, renowned for its high speed and quality dummy models.

TORONTO, April 28 /PRNewswire/ --

- Sherwin-Williams to roll-out broad based incentive compensation solution to 18,000 employees globally

Varicent Software, an innovator and provider of incentive compensation and sales performance management (SPM) solutions, today announced its solution, Varicent SPM, has been selected by Sherwin-Williams to manage compensation and performance for their global sales organization. The Sherwin-Williams Company is a leading manufacturer and distributor of paint, coatings and related products to professional, industrial, commercial and retail customers around the world.

WOBURN, Massachusetts and VEDBAEK, Denmark, April 28 /PRNewswire/ --

- Pathogen Identification Results in 90 Minutes Direct from Positive Blood Cultures

- Faster Results to Help Clinicians Improve Antibiotic Selection and Outcomes for Critical Infections

S.MAMEDE DO CORONADO, Portugal and LONDON, April 28 /PRNewswire/ --

- New Option for Treatment of Epilepsy Patients With Partial Onset Seizures

Bial-Portela CA, S.A., (S. Mamede do Coronado, Portugal, President CEO Dr Luis Portela), and Eisai Europe Limited (London; Chairman CEO Yutaka Tsuchiya), the European subsidiary of Eisai Co., Ltd. (Tokyo, President CEO: Haruo Naito), today announced that the novel once daily anti-epileptic Zebinix(R)* (eslicarbazepine acetate) received marketing authorisation from the European Commission as adjunctive therapy in adults with partial-onset seizures, with or without secondary generalisation.

In ancient stories, and even some newer ones, the appearance of a comet or any heavenly object could symbolize a God's displeasure and even mean a sure failure in battle for one side.   Tel Aviv University researchers say comets could be even more relevant than mythology suggests; they might have actually provided the elements for the emergence of life on our planet.
Young children think about gender in the same way they think about species of animals. They believe, for example, that a boy's preference for football is innate, as is a girl's preference for dolls, just as cats' behavior is innately different from dogs'.

That's the finding of a new study from researchers at Pacific Lutheran University and the University of Michigan. The study appears in the March/April 2009 issue of the journal Child Development.
A new longitudinal study of children's personality traits and interests tells us that sex-typed characteristics develop differently in girls and boys. The study, by researchers at The Pennsylvania State University, the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and Purdue University, appears in Child Development.

The researchers looked at first- and second-born siblings from nearly 200 mostly White, middle-class American families. They collected information through home interviews conducted over seven years, activity diaries provided by the children, and saliva samples that measured the children's testosterone levels.
The record numbers of young people who took part in last year's presidential election, along with high schools' raised expectations that students participate in community service, have led to growing research on teens' civic beliefs and behavior.

A new study finds that most young people consider civic activity to be obligatory, but their judgments and justifications about different types of civic involvement vary by gender and a variety of other factors.
A limestone countertop, a practiced eye and Google Earth all played roles in the discovery of a trove of fossils that may shed light on the origins of African wildlife.

The story concerns University of Michigan paleontologists Philip Gingerich, Gregg Gunnell and Bill Sanders and is the subject of a segment on the award-winning television series "Wild Chronicles," currently airing on public television stations (Episode 412---Looking Back; check listings for local air dates). "Wild Chronicles" is produced by National Geographic Television and presented by WLIW21 in association with WNET.ORG. 
During a seminar several years ago, University of Chicago paleontologist David Jablonski fielded a hostile question: Why bother classifying organisms according to their physical appearance, let alone analyze their evolutionary dynamics, when molecular techniques had already invalidated that approach?

With more than a few heads in the audience nodding their agreement, Jablonski, the William Kenan Jr. Professor in Geophysical Sciences, saw more work to be done. The question launched him on a rigorous study that has culminated in a new approach to reconciling the conflict between fossil and molecular data in evolutionary studies.