Blog archives for August, 2008

August 23, 2008

The Placebo Effect and 12 other things that don’t make sense.

“13 things that do not make sense” Newscientist

The Placebo Effect

Don’t try this at home. Several times a day, for several days, you induce pain in someone. You control the pain with morphine until the final day of the experiment, when you replace the morphine with saline solution. Guess what? The saline takes the pain away.

This is the placebo effect: somehow, sometimes, a whole lot of nothing can be very powerful. Except it’s not quite nothing. When Fabrizio Benedetti of the University of Turin in Italy carried out the above experiment, he added a final twist by adding naloxone, a drug that blocks the effects of morphine, to the saline. The shocking result? The pain-relieving power of saline solution disappeared.

So what is going on? Doctors have known about the placebo effect for decades, and the naloxone result seems to show that the placebo effect is somehow biochemical. But apart from that, we simply don’t know.

Benedetti has since shown that a saline placebo can also reduce tremors and muscle stiffness in people with Parkinson’s disease. He and his team measured the activity of neurons in the patients’ brains as they administered the saline. They found that individual neurons in the subthalamic nucleus (a common target for surgical attempts to relieve Parkinson’s symptoms) began to fire less often when the saline was given, and with fewer “bursts” of firing – another feature associated with Parkinson’s. The neuron activity decreased at the same time as the symptoms improved: the saline was definitely doing something.

We have a lot to learn about what is happening here, Benedetti says, but one thing is clear: the mind can affect the body’s biochemistry. “The relationship between expectation and therapeutic outcome is a wonderful model to understand mind-body interaction,” he says. Researchers now need to identify when and where placebo works. There may be diseases in which it has no effect. There may be a common mechanism in different illnesses. As yet, we just don’t know.

Scientific American – Placebo Effect: A Cure in the Mind

Someone’s Paper on the Placebo Effect

August 19, 2008

“The greater the airtime devoted to country music, the greater the white suicide rate”

I found this story on the Oddee Blog .

«The Effect of Country Music on Suicide»
(S. Stack and J. Gundlach; Wayne State University and Auburn University; 1992)
“The greater the airtime devoted to country music, the greater the white suicide rate”

“According to the authors, Steven Stack and Jim Gundlach, the paper “assesses the link between country music and metropolitan suicide rates. Country music is hypothesized to nurture a suicidal mood through its concerns with problems common in the suicidal population, such as marital discord, alcohol abuse, and alienation from work. The results of a multiple regression analysis of 49 metropolitan areas show that the greater the airtime devoted to country music, the greater the white suicide rate. The effect is independent of divorce, southernness, poverty, and gun availability. The existence of a country music subculture is thought to reinforce the link between country music and suicide. Our model explains 51% of the variance in urban white suicide rates.” The paper can be found online.”

Effect independent of southernness.. Lordy, What could that mean?

I must say that I am not surprised at this correlation, but I am chucklingly surprised to have found a study on it.

August 17, 2008

Space Collective Short Films

Here is a series of short films that the Space Collective has made to represent their online community of futurists, humanists, transhumanists, possibly psychedelic internetophiles, as far as I can tell so far. I enjoyed them.

August 16, 2008

Science of the Brain

Carl Sagan on the Human Brain

Jeff Hawkins: Brain science is about to fundamentally change

Dreams, Information, Lucidity on Discovery Channel
Human Body : Pushing The Limits – Brain Power.
The ending segment on dreams

Economics Theory Adapted To Trace Brain’s Information Flow

The Brain — Emotions, Neurons, Neurotransmitters
Encognitive.com

This post will eventually be a large collection of brain science resources.

Will link to Exercise and Neurogenesis post.

August 15, 2008

Mirror Neurons, Empathic Intersubjectivity, and Boundary Dissolution

Link to Boundary Dissolution Posts

Empathic Synesthesia, Mirror Neurons?

VS Ramachandran: The neurons that shaped civilization

Intersubjectivity and Mirror Neurons, UC Berkeley:

“Marco Iacoboni, M.D., Ph.D., discusses data on mirror neurons that suggest that their role in intersubjectivity may be more accurately described as allowing interdependence. This interdependence shapes the social interactions between people. where the concrete encounter between self and other becomes shared existential meaning that connects them deeply. Series: “M.I.N.D. Institute Lecture Series on Neurodevelopmental Disorders” [6/2008] [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 14664]”

Authors@Google: Marco Iacoboni

Acting and Mirror Neurons (1:47:40)
Philoctetes Center
The Multidisciplinary Study of the Imagination
Couldn’t embed this.

doodling: language, gesture, and cognition by Jim Ratcliffe

put on your spectacles

More to be added soon.

Entangled Minds – Dean Radin

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