Articles Tagged ‘studies’
Brain Blogging Carnival | By April 04, 2008 | By Shaheen E Lakhan, MS, MEd, PhD | 1 Comment
Brain Blogging, Thirtieth Edition
Welcome to the thirtieth edition of Brain Blogging — a semi-monthly blog carnival that aims to review posts “related to the brain and mind that go beyond the basic sciences into a more human and multidimensional perspective.”
Please remember to submit your blog entries using the online submission form. We will do our best to review and include your entry! Enjoy your readings… Read more →
- Why Electroconvulsive Therapy Works
- One Up for the Spanish “Siesta”
- Nuns Provide Key Insight on Aging: Oral Health and Dementia
- Green Tea and the Fight Against Parkinson’s Disease
- Our Caveman Way of Avoiding Danger
- The Science Behind Impulse Buying
- Preventing Dementia with Salmon, Gardening and Sugar-Free Soda
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) has a bad reputation, due in part to the graphic media portrayals we see in films like One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and A Beautiful Mind, and probably also in part to an innate distaste for the idea of receiving electrical shocks to the brain. Despite the popular... Read more →
Good news from the world of medicine for those caught snoozing after lunch at their desks — you can claim it was a deliberate memory enhancement strategy. New research from the University of Haifa’s Center for Brain and Behavior Research shows that a 90-minute day nap speeds up the process... Read more →
A recent finding of the Nun Study identifies oral disease as a potential risk factor for dementia, with conclusions indicating that a low number of teeth — fewer than ten — may be an accurate predictor of dementia in later life. Furthermore, the study showed that subjects with the fewest... Read more →
Parkinson’s disease is the second commonest neurodegenerative disease after Alzheimer’s, affecting 1% of the over-65 population and 2% of the over-80’s. Recent research (1) published in Biological Psychiatry from the Institute of Biophysics, Academia Sinica in Beijing indicates that... Read more →
You know the scenario. You are standing at a family get together lost in thought about a stressful situation in your life when a family member approaches and with a worried tone asks, “What’s wrong?” Did you know that subconsciously they are reading the facial signals you are displaying?... Read more →
The old adage, “Don’t go grocery shopping on an empty stomach” has more validity than you may think. Researches have discovered at least some situations that trigger impulse buying — and not just at the grocery store. Since consumers are the virtual “dead animals on the... Read more →
Research in the field of dementia prevention and treatment is widespread, as people are living longer and thus developing dementia at a higher rate. Three recently published studies point to the importance of diet and exercise in the development of Alzheimer’s and vascular dementia, the two most... Read more →
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Encephalon, Forthy-Third Edition
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder: The Mind/Body Connection
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Are You Depressed Because You're Introverted?
- The Difference Between Doctors and Lawyers
- The Human Injury of Lost Objectivity: An Insider's Look into the Corruption of Clinical Trials
- Persistent Vegetative States: Legal and Political Ramifications
- A Failed Attempt to Improve Perceived Greatness: The ENHANCE Trial
- Domestic Violence: Call for Primary Care Screening and Gender Issues - Part I
- Democracy vs. Domestic Violence
- Cell Transplants for Parkinson’s Disease
- Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD): No Heart for the Meds?
- A Failed Attempt to Improve Perceived Greatness: The ENHANCE Trial
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- Drugs and Pharmacology, Seventh Edition
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder: The Mind/Body Connection
- Domestic Violence and Executive Dysfunction
- Brain Blogging, Thirty-Second Edition
- Excellent article. An area I've been looking at lately. I also see the connect...
- I'm a prosecutor, busily catching up all those minority and mentally ill people ...
- That exhausted doctor/nurse thing always struck me as almost the very stupidest ...
- I'm a physician who carries at all times. No one has a right to inflict death or...
- Doctors need to set up their offices where the patients are. My pediatrician's ...
- I'd feel a lot more comfortable if I knew my doctor had a firearm handy. I haven...
- I would be completely fine with it. In fact, I would be *more likely* to go to ...
- If I were a patient, I think it would be kind of scary to know that ...
- If I were a patient, I think it would be kind of scary to know that ...
- To answer your questions:
Would you not see a doctor if you knew ...