📄 Extracted Text (546 words)
From: LHS
Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2017 5:34 PM
To: Jeffrey Epstein
Cc: Ihsoffice
Subject: Fwd: AAAS Kali Science Journalism Award
Where r u.
Did u really write my wife that "kids don't read"
You must have perspectives on current events....
Sent from my iPhone
Please direct all schedulin: in. uiries tom office at:
Follow me on twitter
www.larrysummers.com <http://www.larrysummers.com/>
Begin forwarded message:
From: John Steele
Date: November 15 2017 at 12:28:51PM EST
To: Lisa New
Lhs
Subject: AAAS Kali Science Journalism Award
Lisa and Larry,
For the second time in three years, a Nautilus article has won the prestigious AAAS Kavli Science Journalism
Award <https://sjawards.aaas.org/2017winners?utm_source=64&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=AAAS-Kavli-
Awards-(@AAASKavli)&utm_term=Kavli&utm_content=AAAS> .
J.B. MacKinnon, a Canadian freelancer for Nautilus, won the Silver Award in the magazine category for a piece
exploring why Alex Honnold, who climbs towering rock walls without ropes or protective equipment, does not
experience fear like the rest of us.
SILVER AWARD
J.B. MacKinnon
EFTA_R1_01732188
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J.B. MacKinnon
Nautilus
"The Strange Brain of the World's Greatest Solo Climber" <http://nautil.us/issue/39/sport/the-strange-brain-of-
the-worlds-greatest-solo-climber>
July/August 2016
Alex Honnold, the world's greatest solo climber, doesn't experience fear like the rest of us. He climbs to dizzying
heights without a rope or protective equipment of any kind, shuffles across narrow sills of stone such as the "Thank
God" ledge high atop the sheer granite face of Half Dome in Yosemite National Park. When J.B. MacKinnon, a Canadian
freelance writer, approached Honnold about having scientists look at what goes on in his unusual brain, the climber said
he once would have been afraid to submit himself to such scrutiny. But he agreed, and the result was a fascinating tour
of the topography and activity of Honnold's brain. When he and a control subject, another sensation-seeking rock
climber, viewed gruesome, high-arousal photographs during functional magnetic resonance imaging brain scans,
Honnold's amygdala — the brain's fear center — showed zero activation while the other climber's lit up like a neon sign.
The piece goes on to describe the known functions of the amygdala and the nucleus accumbens, another brain
structure, and explores the concepts of consolidation and visualization. The study of Honnold's brain was strictly
observational, but the researcher involved said it raises intriguing questions about brain control and regulation that
might be applicable to other conditions such as anxiety disorders. "Everyone seemed to be saying that Alex Honnold
must be 'wired differently' in order to pull off his incredible feats of ropeless rock climbing, and I thought, 'Well, these
days we can find out if that's true,'" MacKinnon said. "The answer proved to be more complicated and more fascinating.
In the end, my own relationship with fear and climbing was so deeply changed that I was able to do some very humble
ropeless rock climbing myself." Robert Lee Hotz, a science writer for the The Wall Street Journal said MacKinnon's story
"lights up with the joy of great reporting and ambitious enterprise: Who else would put the world's most adventurous
free climber into a brain scanner to probe the neural circuits that make most of us shudder, squirm and squeal with
panic?"
Very exciting for Nautilus,
John
John Steele
Publisher & Editorial Director
Nautilus
25 Broadway, 9th Floor
New York, NY 10004
212-221-3870 x 302
www.nautil.us <http://www.nautil.us>
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
2
EFTA_R1_01732189
EFTA02566794
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EFTA_R1_01732190
EFTA02566795
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
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Bates Number
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Dataset
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Document Type
document
Pages
3
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