Mason Media Blog

George Mason University's Office of Media and Public Relations

Archive for February, 2011

Mason’s Green Machine Rocks Out to Rage Against the Machine

Monday, February 28th, 2011

Doc Nix and the Green Machine are taking the Internet by storm! Check out the latest video of Mason’s pep band rocking out to Rage Against the Machine. So far, the video has racked up more than 400,000 views on YouTube.

The Green Machine now heads to the CAA Tournament where it will cheer on the men’s basketball team to victory! After a winning streak of 15 straight games, the Patriots will face off against either ninth-seeded GSU Panthers or eighth-seeded UNC Wilmington at noon on Saturday, March 5.

More information about the Patriots postseason and on purchasing tickets for the CAA Tournament is available at GoMason.com.

A Grudge Match between Humanity and Death—Who Wins?

Monday, February 28th, 2011
New Research Shows Being Mindful Can Ease Fears of Death and Dying

Death can be terrifying. Recognizing that death is inescapable and unpredictable makes us incredibly vulnerable, and can invoke feelings of anxiety, hatred and fear. But new research by George Mason University psychology professor Todd Kashdan shows that being a mindful person not only makes you generally more tolerant and less defensive, but it can also actually neutralize fears of dying and death.

Photo by Lisa Omarali via Flickr

“Mindfulness is being open, receptive, and attentive to whatever is unfolding in the present moment,” says Kashdan. In his latest research, Kashdan and his colleagues wanted to find out if mindful people had different attitudes about death and dying.

“Generally, when reminded of our mortality, we are extremely defensive. Like little kids who nearly suffocate under blanket protection to fend off the monster in the closet, the first thing we try to do is purge any death-related thoughts or feelings from our mind,” says Kashdan.

“On the fringes of this conscious awareness, we try another attempt to ward off death anxiety. We violently defend beliefs and practices that provide a sense of stability and meaning in our lives.”

Kashdan says this practice often has an ugly side—intolerance and abuse. “When people are reminded that death is impending, their racist tendencies increase,” he says. In a series of experiments conducted by the University of Missouri-Columbia, for example, white people asked to read about a crime committed by another person give harsher penalties for black compared with white defendants after being reminded of their mortality.

Kashdan wondered what might prevent these defensive, intolerant reactions from occurring. In a recent study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, he and his colleagues looked at what might happen when mindfulness and the terror of death collide.

“A grudge match between humanity and death,” says Kashdan.

If mindful people are more willing to explore whatever happens in the present, even if it uncomfortable, will they show less defensiveness when their sense of self is threatened by a confrontation with their own mortality?

Based on the results of 7 different experiments, the answer appears to be yes. When reminded about their death and asked to write about what will happen when their bodies decompose (in grisly detail), less mindful people showed an intense dislike for foreigners that mention what’s wrong with the United States (pro-U.S. bias), greater prejudice against black managers who discriminated against a white employee in a promotion decision (pro-white bias), and harsher penalties for social transgressions such as prostitution, marital infidelities, and drug use by physicians that led to surgical mishaps.

Across these various situations, on the contrast, mindful people showed a lack of defensiveness toward people that didn’t share their worldview. Mindful people were diplomatic and tolerant regardless of whether they were prompted to think about their slow, systematic decline toward obliteration.

“What we found was that when asked to deeply contemplate their death, mindful people spent more time writing (as opposed to avoiding) and used more death-related words when reflecting on the experience. This suggests that a greater openness to processing the threat of death allows compassion and fairness to reign. In this laboratory staged battle, mindfulness alters the power that death holds over us,” Kashdan says.

Mason Professor Honored as Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

Susan Conard

Susan G. Conard, a research professor affiliated with the Department of Geography and Geoinformation Science (GGS), the EastFIRE Laboratory and the Mason Center for Climate and Society in the College of Science at George Mason University, has been elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).  Conard and other newly elected fellows are being recognized for their contributions to science and technology at the Fellows Forum on February 19 during the AAAS Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.  Conard is among the honorees from the AAAS Section on Biological Sciences.

Each year the AAAS Council elects members whose “efforts on behalf of the advancement of science or its applications are scientifically or socially distinguished.”  The honor of being elected a Fellow of AAAS began in 1874 and is acknowledged with a certificate and rosette.

Conard is honored for her distinguished contributions to fire ecology, including  serving as president of the International Boreal Forest Research Association and as editor of the International Journal of Wildland Fie.  Prior to joining Mason, Conard served as the national program leader for Fire Ecology Research with the United States Forest Service.

Mason Researcher Finds Concussions in High School Sports Are Rising

Monday, February 7th, 2011

Shane Caswell

Although football season has come to a close, reports of players sustaining major concussions were all too common this year. As a result, the NFL and other sports leagues — from professional to youth levels — are increasingly concerned about making the sport safer for its players.

Keeping players safe is what Shane Caswell, associate professor of athletic training and director of the Sports Medicine Assessment, Research and Testing (SMART) Laboratory in Mason’s College of Education and Human Development, hopes to accomplish in his research. It focuses on the prevention of traumatic brain injury in sport.

In his most recent study, Caswell, a certified athletic trainer, and his colleagues, examined the concussion trends of more than 150,000 student athletes at Fairfax County Public Schools for 11 consecutive years, beginning in 1997 and ending in 2008. They found that concussions rates in high school sports are rising at a 15 percent annual rate.

The results showed that boys’ sports accounted for three quarters of all concussions and football topped the list of sports with the highest concussion rates. Girls’ soccer came in a distant second among concussion rates. But, surprisingly, in similar girls’ and boys’ spots, the concussion rate for girls was roughly twice what was reported for boys.

The study followed student athletes from six boys’ sports – football, lacrosse, wrestling, soccer, basketball and baseball – and six girls’ sports – field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, basketball, cheerleading and softball.

“At the completion of the study, we were not surprised to find that the collision sports of football and boys’ lacrosse contributed to the high number of total concussions,” says Caswell.

“Despite these findings, we observed increasing concussion rates in every sport, which leads us to suggest that although the highest percentage of concussions occur in high-impact sports, efforts to detect, treat and prevent concussion should not be limited to those sports.”

More information about the study can be found here.