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Transforming Terrorizing Memories
I’ll never forget it. They strapped electrodes to my wrist, cranked up a black dial on a frightening electronic device encrusted with switches and knobs, and shocked me repeatedly with jolts of electricity.
Read MoreCreativity Madness and Drugs
Writers are crazy and rock musicians want to be–neuroscientists meet and explain why San Diego–Would we have Poe’s Raven today if the tormented author had taken lithium to suppress his bipolar illness? Not likely, considering the high frequency of psychiatric illnesses among writers and artists concludes psychiatrist Kay Jamison of Johns Hopkins Medical School speaking…
Read MoreWhen Crying Triggers Murder
Crying provoke positive, supportive, caregiving responses, as well as negative, destructive, responses.
Read MoreElectrical Stimulation of Brain Circuit to Control Good Behavior
Human beings are utterly dependent on a complex social structure for their survival. Since all behavior is controlled by the brain, human beings may have evolved specialized neural circuits that are responsible for compliance with society’s rules. A new study has identified such a region in the human brain, and researchers can increase or decrease…
Read MoreWhat Neuroscience (and Cows) Tell us About the Government Shut-Down
The actions of congressmen and women in the government shutdown would not be possible without the neuroscience of human herding behavior and the loss of normal constraints on deviant behavior that this causes.
Read MoreMap the Brain–Not Just Neurons
Our understanding of one half of the brain (the part comprised of astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and microglia) lags a century behind our knowledge of neurons.
Read MoreBrain Scan Can Reveal How Much School Work You’ve Done
Much like the age of a fish can be determined by the number of rings on its scales, a new study shows that the number of years a person has studied in school can be seen on a brain scan decades later by measuring the growth in certain brain regions. …
Read MoreNeuroscience
I was stopped at a red light. Through my rear view mirror I saw the car speeding toward me. The driver was looking down operating a cell phone in his lap. I considered putting my car in park because the rapid acceleration in a crash is what damages, but I did not want to…
Read MoreThe Collapse of Science, Not Housing, Ended the American Dream
(First published on Huffington Post Science) The job of a scientist is to predict the future and get there first. We do this by looking for patterns in subtle clues; organizing the fragments thoughtfully to project their likely trajectory. It is this process that moves me to write this essay; in essence an epitaph from…
Read MoreErasing Memory: No Longer Science Fiction
The fact is, there is no convincing evidence that the memory of specific experience (called declarative memory) can be erased in humans–until now.
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