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80beats

Archive for the ‘Mind & Brain’ Category

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Those Graphic New Cigarette Labels Won’t Help, Psychology Says

What’s the News: Starting in September 2012, the FDA will require every pack of cigarettes sold in the US to be emblazoned with a large, text-and-image health warning, similar to the labels already seen in Canada, the United Kingdom, Brazil, and several other countries. The FDA unveiled the nine label designs earlier this week; several are quite graphic, including photos of cancerous lungs and lips and a man exhaling smoke through his tracheotomy hole.

These graphic images, however, may not be an effective way to get smokers to quit, or deter new smokers from starting. Several neuroscience and psychology studies show that these fear tactics have little effect—and may at times do more harm than good.

(more…)

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June 24th, 2011 Tags: fMRI, neuroscience, psychology, smoking
by Valerie Ross in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 38 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Chemical in Predator Pee Scares the Pee Out of Rodents

What’s the News: In the animal kingdom, prey species must follow one rule above all others: keep away from predators. To do this, some animals take chemical cues from the urine they stumble upon. Now, new research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science has identified a single molecule in the urine of many mammalian carnivores that causes rodents to scurry in fear. This chemical could eventually help scientists understand instinctual behavior in animals.

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June 23rd, 2011 Tags: animals, mice, rats, rodents, senses
by Joseph Castro in Living World, Mind & Brain | 7 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Each Half of the Brain Has Its Own Memory Storage

What’s the News: The left and right halves of the brain have separate stores for working memory, the information we actively keep in mind, suggests a study published online yesterday by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. People can, on average, hold only four pieces of information in working memory—say, where four strangers are seated in a room. The current study suggests that, in fact, working memory capacity is two plus two—two items stored in each side of the brain—rather than four items stored anywhere. This understanding could be used to design learning techniques and visual displays that maximize working memory capacity.

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June 21st, 2011 Tags: memory, monkeys, neuroscience
by Valerie Ross in Mind & Brain | 13 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Brain Implant Restores Memories in Rats by Recording & Playing Them Back

What’s the News: Scientists have built a brain implant that can restore lost memories and reinforce new ones. The implant, tested in a recent study in rats, brings back a memory by recording and replaying the electrical activity of neurons in a part of the hippocampus, the brain’s long-term memory center. While the device is far from ready for use in humans, it’s an important step toward memory-boosting implants that could one day help patients who have developed dementia or suffered a stroke.

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June 20th, 2011 Tags: machine-brain connections, memory, neural prosthetics, neurons, neuroscience
by Valerie Ross in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 9 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Can Brain Scans Diagnose Autism?

What’s the News: A number of recent studies have suggested that brain scans could be used to diagnose autism. Virginia Hughes investigated these claims in a report for the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative. While some researchers feel these tests could soon be ready for the clinic, she found, others feel that relying on the scans for diagnosis is at least premature, and perhaps entirely misguided. Some important points in her report:

How the Would-Be Autism Tests Work:

  • The studies have focused on a variety of possible indicators of autism and used several types of scans: measuring activation of brain regions as people do or experience particular things; examining neural anatomy; tracing connectivity between parts of the brain; and analyzing the electrical activity produced by neurons firing.
  • All the scans, however, have one central goal: picking out reliable, predictive differences between the brains of children with autism and unaffected children.

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June 16th, 2011 Tags: autism, diagnosis, eeg, fMRI, MRI
by Valerie Ross in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 9 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Cheating Female Finches Get Their Infidelity Genes from Dad

finches
Maybe her cheatin’ heart came from Daddy.

What’s the News: Infidelity among monogamous bird couples has always been something of a stumper for biologists. It’s easy enough to understand from the male’s perspective—the more he plays the field, the more offspring he has. But why do females cheat? True, she might get more genetic variety among her offspring, which could help them survive. But the benefits aren’t as clear, especially since she risks losing her mate.

To shed some light on the subject, scientists have charted the coupling of zebra finches, which are usually monogamous, and found that there’s a genetic reason some females engage in extracurricular activity: they get it from their fathers. And this supports a new take on the evolution of infidelity. Maybe it doesn’t have to be in the female’s interest to cheat—maybe it just has to be in her dad’s interest.

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June 14th, 2011 Tags: attraction, evolution, infidelity, mating, natural selection, zebra finches
by Veronique Greenwood in Living World, Mind & Brain | 5 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

What Makes a Song Commercially Successful? Ask Your Brain

What’s the News: It’s always a gamble when a record company decides to sign a new band, as they can never truly predict which artists will be successful. Sometimes marketing firms will use focus groups to guess at future musical gold mines, but conflicting motivations, among other things, can hamper results. Now, researchers have found that while you may not be able to consciously pinpoint which songs will be hits, your brain just might.

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June 14th, 2011 Tags: brain, fMRI, music
by Joseph Castro in Mind & Brain | 4 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Scientists Pinpoint Why Smokers Pack on Pounds When They Quit

What’s the News: Scientists—and smokers—have long known that nicotine is an appetite suppressant, but just how it kept hunger at bay remained unclear. Now, researchers have uncovered the neural pathway by which nicotine reduces appetite, in a study published today in Science. This discovery could lead to new drugs that help people quit smoking or lose weight.

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June 10th, 2011 Tags: appetite, neuroscience, nicotine, Science (journal), smoking, weight
by Valerie Ross in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 6 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Bodily Invasion During Duckling-hood Makes Adult Ducks More Adventurous

ducks

What’s the News: Infections that change an organism’s personality are a strange little corner of biology, with toxoplasmosis, which brainwashes mice and rats to have no fear of cats, topping the list. But scientists think that more pedestrian infections could play a role in shaping personality, especially when they happen early in life. Ducklings provide the latest data that this theory may have something to it.

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June 8th, 2011 Tags: infection, parasites, personality, toxoplasmosis
by Veronique Greenwood in Living World, Mind & Brain | 6 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

New Way to Smuggle Drugs Into Brain May Lead to Better Alzheimer’s Treatments

What’s the News: A modified antibody can make its way into the brain and target the development of Alzheimer’s-inducing plaques, researchers reported today in two animal studies in Science Translational Medicine. The blood-brain barrier usually keeps drugs and other compounds from entering the brain in large enough quantities to be effective, but these studies show a way to trick the body’s own defenses into letting the drug in, demonstrating that this obstacle to treating Alzheimer’s could potentially be overcome.

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May 26th, 2011 Tags: Alzheimer’s, antibodies, blood-brain barrier, dementia, drugs
by Valerie Ross in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | 6 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Parallel Lines Never Cross, Even in Remote Amazonia

What’s the News: Adults and school-age children may understand some basic principles of geometry even without formal math training at all, according to a study published online yesterday by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Thirty members of the Mundurucú, an indigenous Amazonian group, could intuitively grasp geometric concepts about angles, lines, and points, the researchers found.

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May 24th, 2011 Tags: Amazon, geometry, math, nature vs. nurture, PNAS, psychology
by Valerie Ross in Mind & Brain, Physics & Math | 12 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

New PJs Could Watch You Snooze—& Track Effects of That Last Cup of Coffee

What’s the News: Smart clothes might soon be coming into bed with you. A company is developing shirts endowed with a chip that senses the changes in breathing that accompany shifts in sleep phase, to help people track how variables like exercise, coffee intake, and stress affect their sleep.

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May 24th, 2011 Tags: iPhone, personal technology, REM sleep, sleep
by Veronique Greenwood in Mind & Brain, Technology | 5 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Ulcer-Causing Bacteria May Play a Role in Parkinson’s

What’s the News: The bacterium that causes ulcers and some stomach cancers, Helicobacter pylori, could at least contribute to Parkinson’s disease, according to a new study in mice presented at a microbiology conference yesterday. Mice infected with H. pylori have shown Parkinson’s-like symptoms, building on earlier work that has suggested a link between the bacteria and Parkonson’s disease.

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May 23rd, 2011 Tags: bacteria, dopamine, mice, Parkinson's, ulcers
by Valerie Ross in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain | No Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

Mammals’ Big Brains Started with Better Sense of Smell

What’s the News: Mammals’ increased brain size may have come from long-ago natural selection for a better sense of smell, suggests a new study published today in Science. By reconstructing in 3D the skulls of two animals far back on the mammal family tree, the researchers saw that growth of smell-related brain regions accounted for much of the early increase in brain size as mammals developed.

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May 20th, 2011 Tags: brain size, evolution, mammals, neocortex, olfaction, Science (journal)
by Valerie Ross in Living World, Mind & Brain | 3 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

When Scientists Act Like Jerks, Asian-Americans Reach for a Hamburger

burger

What’s the News: Fitting in is a perennial problem for almost everybody, especially immigrants and their children (for more, see The Joy Luck Club). And anxiety about food is definitely part of it: when your friends think your mom’s home cooking is weird, well, maybe you’ll just pretend you don’t like it either. In fact, maybe you’ll eat more French fries and pizza than is entirely healthy to fit in, something that might explain why newly arrived immigrants balloon to the rest of the U.S. population’s levels of obesity in just 15 years. In a study designed to see how being perceived as un-American changed peoples’ food choices, scientists behaved badly and then brought out the menus.

(more…)

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May 15th, 2011 Tags: identity, immigrants, nutrition, obesity, psychology, racism, social psychology, stereotype threat
by Veronique Greenwood in Health & Medicine, Mind & Brain, Top Posts | 26 Comments » | RSS feed | Trackback >

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    • About 80beats

      80beats is DISCOVER's news aggregator, weaving together the choicest tidbits from the best articles on the day's most compelling topics.

      80beats is written by Veronique Greenwood and Valerie Ross. This team darts through each day's science news faster than the ruby-throated hummingbird that beats its wings 80 times per second. Send ideas, tips, suggestions, and complaints to [azeeberg at discovermagazine dot com].



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