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Essentialism beyond just animals [A Blog Around The Clock]

February 14, 2009 in Blogs, Brain & Behaviour by BrainAndBehaviour

How religion generates social conservatism : You could make a reasonable case that pencils have a purpose, but pencil shavings just exist. But what about elephants? Religious people and children are, of course, more likely than non-religious adults to say that animals exist for a purpose. But what about men and women? Black people and whites? Rich and poor? Arab and Jew? Do these exist for a purpose? And is it possible for one to become another? Gil Diesdendruck and Lital Haber of Bar-Ilan University in Israel decided to find out what children think. Read the comments on this post…

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Essentialism beyond just animals [A Blog Around The Clock]

Hot Puppet Action [Zooillogix]

February 13, 2009 in Blogs, Brain & Behaviour by BrainAndBehaviour

Concerned that their male red bird of paradise, Paprika, might turn off female companions by repeating human words he learned from visitors, animal keeper Patti Cooper took matters into her own hands. First she crafted a sexy female red bird of paradise puppet, dubbed “Spice Girl.” Then she convinced Paprika to call Spice Girl on a 900 number. Now Paprika is engaged in the right behaviors and the Bronx Zoo is making $2.99 for the first minute and $16.99 for each additional minute. No but for real, the bird got it on with a puppet… and is now displaying the proper courtship behaviors. Red bird in paradise Dude, that bird looks way psyched. Read the comments on this post…

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Hot Puppet Action [Zooillogix]

Sheril on the "Science of Kissing" in New Scientist [The Intersection]

February 13, 2009 in Blogs, Brain & Behaviour by BrainAndBehaviour

Folks, it has been a really rough time for Sheril–she may or may not tell the full story herself, but suffice it to say that she has been hospitalized for several days and has only recently been allowed to come home, and this unfortunate turn of events has prevented her from attending the AAAS meeting in Chicago, where she was set to headline at the high profile “Science of Kissing” panel on Valentine’s Day. That’s a very sad missed opportunity; but luckily, Sheril has also done a freelance article for New Scientist about the same subject, which has just come out and which you can read here . A brief excerpt: As natural as kissing seems, it also means swapping mucus, bacteria and who knows what else, so how and why would such a behaviour evolve? Science has been seeking answers for decades. Neuroscientists point to the way it unleashes a flood of neurotransmitters and hormones associated with social bonding and sex. Anthropologists explain it as a relic of mouth-to-mouth feeding from mothers to infants. Others have suggested that kissing conveys important information about prospective mates and so evolved as a guide to mate selection. It has even been passed off as a purely cultural phenomenon since some groups refrain from it entirely…. It’s a fairly brief piece, but it marks her move into real science journalism–and that’s something I want to applaud. I hope you’ll join me–and enjoy the article . Read the comments on this post…

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Sheril on the "Science of Kissing" in New Scientist [The Intersection]

Casual Fridays: Just a random survey [Cognitive Daily]

February 13, 2009 in Blogs, Brain & Behaviour by BrainAndBehaviour

Just a random Casual Friday survey this week. Click here to take survey . As usual, the survey is brief, and should take only a minute or two to complete. You have until Thursday, February 19 to respond. There is no limit on the number of responses. Don’t forget to come back next Friday for the results. Read the comments on this post…

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Casual Fridays: Just a random survey [Cognitive Daily]

The $70,000 Solution: Escape from the Nursing Home

January 13, 2009 in Blogs, Psychology Today by Psychology Today

Lucky you. Your number just hit big on Lotto, and you’re getting a payout of $70,000 a year! Just in time. You’re frail, and at age 65 you wonder how far your measly social security check will go. Unlucky you. You dance for joy and fall and break your hip. You wind up in the hospital instead of on easy street, and the docs don’t want to discharge you back home. They’re worried you’ll fall again, and they notice you’re a bit dazed and confused. Not to worry. You do have that $70,000 annual payment. Surely you’ll land on your feet in a room with a view. But would you like that room to be a hospital-style room with only a curtain for privacy? Would you like your door to be always open for strangers to walk in to poke and prod? Would you want it to be noisy with loudspeakers, loud talking, and beeping medical equipment? In other words, the typical nursing home. Seventy thousand dollars is the average annual nursing home fee, whether you are Brooke Astor and can afford to pay for it out of pocket, whether you have long-term care insurance, or whether you’re on welfare and your stay is funded by Medicaid–which alone accounted for $54 billion of the $122 billion national expenditure in 2005. Who plans for this? Few elders or their families make a deliberate, considered decision to move to a nursing home. Institutionalization more likely follows an accident or sudden illness. The slip, the fall, and the broken hip is a typical scenario. First the hospital, then the nursing home for rehab. If things go well, you get back home. If they don’t, you may start hearing noises about your inability to be on your own. There’s little to argue against a nursing home for short-term rehab. But could we imagine a better way to spend that $70,000 windfall for the long-term? What about chucking the institution, staying home, and doing it a la carte? The average charge for a health aide is $18/hour. So a 24-7 health care aide would run your annual tab to $157,680, blowing through your $70,000. But a little economy of scale goes a long way. Three frail elders could share an apartment and a 24-hour aide and have almost $52,000 left over for food, clothing, shelter, physical therapy, and fun and frolic. In most cases, a nursing home is way more than necessary–a sledgehammer for a thumb tack. Many people need just a little bit of help–someone to dispense their meds, prepare their meals, and help to get in and out of bed. Others might need 24-hour care, but not a nursing home. Assisted living–the halfway house between home-sweet-home and the nursing home–will fit the bill. But, oddly, Medicaid won’t foot the assisted living bill. Medicaid will pay only for care in medical facilities, and assisted living doesn’t qualify–even though the average annual cost is significantly lower, about $30,000. Add up the elderly millions who will eventually qualify for Medicaid, and think of the billions in savings. This is only one of the irrationalities in our health care system. Insurance companies and government health financing agencies will pay tens of thousands of dollars for psychiatric hospitalization, but severely limit the hundreds of dollars for cost-effective outpatient psychotherapy. This despite abundant evidence that an ounce of prevention–outpatient therapy–is worth innumerable pounds of cures in hospitals. The supposed gold standard for care is to provide services in the "least restrictive environment." Unnecessarily shuttling people into the most restrictive setting grossly violates this standard. The idea of pooled resources and cooperative living arrangements is not new, nor does it originate in eldercare. In 1963, George Fairweather, a psychologist, proposed a model–the Community Lodge Program–that offered a way for psychiatric patients to live outside of hospitals. Groups of patients pool their government benefits, buy or rent lodging, start businesses, and hire professional staff to meet their special needs. Today, there are lodge programs across the nation. When psychiatric patients or elders hire their own staff and run their own programs, they are transformed from dependent patients to empowered captains of their own fate. The lodge program is but one of the good ideas to avoid hospital style institutionalization for the frail elderly. Aging in place is an idea that has an intrinsic appeal to my iconoclastic baby boomer generation. The problem is not a lack of ideas, but public policy that resists thinking outside the medical model box. But that box is bursting at the seams. Everyone is worrying about how the diminutive x, y, and z generations will pay for all of us boomers in our dotage. Financial shortfalls, rather than creative imagination, may force the diversion of funding into more cost-effective, less restrictive, more consumer controlled environments. My graying Woodstock generation could come to look at cooperative care arrangements as a last chance to join the commune they only fantasized about a generation ago. It could be summers of love for the autumns of our days (A version of this appeared as an op-ed in the New York Times (Jsnusty 17, 2007) as " Escape from the Nursing Home ." Here I have the opportunity to publish it as I originally wrote it with a different ending.) © 2009 Psychology Today. This RSS Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact blogs@psychologytoday.com so we can take legal action immediately.

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The $70,000 Solution: Escape from the Nursing Home

How David Beats Goliath in Problem-solving

January 12, 2009 in Blogs, Psychology Today by Psychology Today

Here’s the problem: Your circle of competence is small, but the demands of the world are great. How do you make your circle of competence speak to the problem? The answer is akin to how people use myths. Historian of religions Jonathan Z. Smith drew on anthropologist Victor Turner’s work in divination to explain how myths are similar to wine. People can make wine from nearly any fruit but typically make wine only from grapes. Yet from that initial reduction in choices (from any fruit to just grapes), there then follows a great expansion in that there are thousands of different kinds of wines, all made from grapes. From "an almost limitless horizon of possibilities that are at hand," said Smith, the field of possible cultural meanings is reduced to the fixed set of meanings that are contained in the myth. In other words, myths are often a small number of stories that people tell again and again. "Then," Smith elaborated, "the most intense ingenuity is exercised to overcome the reduction" when people apply these cultural meanings to deal with a problem. That is, even though there are a small number of stories in the myth, people make these stories speak to an ever-increasing number of different circumstances. People apply ancient sutras to decisions on biotechnology; they ask the Bible to speak to issues of nuclear proliferation. In other words, your circle of competence may be quite small, but by exercising it creatively, you can apply it to many problems. Smith, J. 1993. Map Is Not Territory: Studies in the History of Religions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Excerpted from Lasting Contribution: How to Think, Plan, and Act to Accomplish Meaningful Work by Tad Waddington. Find out more at http://www.lastingcontribution.com .   © 2009 Psychology Today. This RSS Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact blogs@psychologytoday.com so we can take legal action immediately.

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How David Beats Goliath in Problem-solving

by Vaughan

2009-01-02 Spike activity

January 2, 2009 in Blogs, Mind Hacks by Vaughan

Quick links from the past week in mind and brain news: Neuroanthropology publishes the list of best online anthropology writing of 2008. A thorough and accessible academic article on Facebook and the social dynamics of privacy is available in draft form from lawyer James Grimmelmann. PsyBlog has an excellent piece on a simple but evidence-based exercise on gratitude that has been shown to increase well-being. Average THC content in US marijuana increasing, reports Wired . Seed magazine has an interesting piece on how maths and sociology can predict the next big thing in music. Developmental psychologist Elizabeth Spelke and philosopher Joshua Knobe discuss what babies tell us about cognitive development, math and racism in a video discussion over at 3QuarksDaily . Wired has an short article on the anthropology of YouTube. Stupid title, good write-up. Nine-month-old babies can tell the difference between happy and sad music , according to research covered by the BPS Research Digest . Neuronarrative has video of a talk by Terry Pratchett discussing having Alzheimer’s disease. The use of MDMA (ecstasy) to assist psychological treatment for trauma is discussed by The Economist . Dana has an interesting piece where Eric Kandel discusses the year in neuroscience . Bizarrely, he seems to uncritically accept the ‘autism epidemic’ shadyness. A free neuroaesthetics conference is being held in Berkley, California. My Mind on Books has the details. Channel N has a list of its best videos of 2008. Drug companies have agreed to stop giving free trinkets to doctors, according to The New York Times , in what seems like a token effort to make themselves more ethical. The Economist has an interesting article discussing the politics of evolutionary explanations for behaviour. A study on texting as a sign of cognitive recovery after loss of consciousness is covered by The Neurocritic . Neurophilosophy has a great piece on a new study showing that the ability to recognise our own faces can de disrupted by touch.

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2009-01-02 Spike activity

by Vaughan

Understanding numbers: let me count the ways

December 31, 2008 in Blogs, Mind Hacks by Vaughan

The latest edition of The Economist has an interesting article about whether our ability to count and estimate quantity is an innate ability that we have from birth. The article covers studies on babies, people who speak languages that only have number words for “one”, “two”, “few” and “many”, people who have never developed certain maths skills and others who have lost specific number abilities after brain injury: Lisa Cipolotti , a neuropsychologist, studied a Signora Gaddi, who used to run a hotel and keep its accounts. After a stroke she could find the number of things in a small group only by counting—when asked how many arms a crucifix had, she got Dr Cipolotti to hold out her arms so she could count them. Signora Gaddi’s problems seemed to affect only numbers. She could still read, speak and reason, remember historical and geographical facts, and order objects by their physical size. In fact, Signora Gaddi’s difficulties went even deeper than Charles’s. The stroke which damaged her innate understanding of small numbers also robbed her of the entire numerical edifice built on that foundation. For her, numbers stopped at four. When asked to count up from one, she got to four and no further. If there were more than four dots on a page she could not count them. She could not say how old she was or how many days were in a week, or even tell the time. Link to Economist article ‘Easy as 1, 2, 3′.

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Understanding numbers: let me count the ways

by Vaughan

2008-12-05 Spike activity

December 5, 2008 in Blogs, Mind Hacks by Vaughan

Quick links from the past week in mind and brain news: Neurophilosophy discusses a newly discovered form of synaesthesia – touch-emotion synaesthesia. Psychological highlights from the most recent Society for Neuroscience conference are collected by the BPS Research Digest . Discover Magazine has a punchy bio of Noam Chomsky . Antidepressants that leak into the water supply affect fishes’ brains, according to research covered by Science News . A whole lotta coverage of the ‘body swapping’ research has appeared over the last few days. The best has been an article on Not Exactly Rocket Science , a piece from The New York Times and a write-up from Wired . New Scientist picks up on research suggesting psychopaths have an eye for the underdog. A review of a new book on the author of Roget’s thesaurus sounds fascinating – “The Man Who Made Lists: Love, Death, Madness, and the Creation of Roget’s Thesaurus” – and appears in the American Journal of Psychiatry . Neuronarrative interviews Jonah Lehrer and asks him about the art, mind and brain. A rather breathless title but an interesting write-up of an experiment finding the same thing seems more painful if someone deliberately inflicts it – from Discover . The British Journal of Psychiatry has a study showing that IQ predicts likelihood of murder – the higher your IQ, the less likely you are to get knocked off. The U.N. investigates electromagnetic terrorism – a somewhat bizarre episode reported by Wired . The Washington Post looks at a recent neuroscience study perhaps suggesting the origins of the ‘ senior moment ‘. Obama invents a new emotion, reports Slate . NPR Radio has a fascinating short segment suggesting that colour perception switches sides in brain during development. A letter in the American Journal of Psychiatry discusses web-based communities of possibly delusional people and comes to a similar conclusion as myself regarding the validity of the diagnostic criteria. The New York Times reports on the politics of looking calm and unruffled vs looking concerned. Baby boys may show spatial supremacy , have robot army, will crush puny humans under foot, reports Science News . I paraphrased the last two points you understand. The New York Times has a curious piece on the possible psychological effect (based on nothing but pure speculation it must be said) of which time watches are set to when the appear in adverts. A follow-up from our piece on Rudolpfo Llinás discusses the role of brain oscillations in schizophrenia (thanks CopperKettle).

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2008-12-05 Spike activity

Thick Skin Pays Off in Leadership

December 1, 2008 in Blogs, Psychology Today by Psychology Today

Women still dodge low balls in the public sphere . They are ready to brush off personal attacks to focus on what matters to them in politics or in the workplace. Whether we are talking about Hillary Clinton or Sarah Palin, we all agree that thick skin pays off in leadership positions. The most humiliating moments for either one of these two candidates may have been when their personal lives were questioned: for Palin, needing to "prove" to the world that her youngest son was really hers and not her daughter’s (a lioness in defense of not one but two of her cubs) or putting up with the media’s criticisim of a woman not being able to be a good mother and an effective leader at the same time. While hers has been a recent bout with the sometimes heartless media, Clinton’s putting up with her husband’s infidelity disclosed to the world while in power has been public for years. After something as embarrassing as her marriage made public, I don’t believe there is anything that nominee for Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, can’t face. These women have what it takes in a tough world: they have thick skin. Pros of having thick skin in the workplace: 1. Although most people like to be liked, others strive on getting things done regardless of whether they win the popularity contest or not. 2. Disregarding both hurtful and senseless criticisms will allow you to focus on the bottom line, the common goal, without being distracted by personal attacks. This does not mean that leaders don’t listen to others’ advice; it just means they should be able to filter personal attacks and dismiss them. 3. Inner strength shows itself not when the world is praising you but when others are critical. It is easy to feel powerful when everyone around you is smiling at you, but the criticisms truly show who your true friends and foes are. Some cons about having thick skin in the workplace: 1. Many see this inner feeling of self-assurance as outward arrogance, creating distance between the leader and his or her employees. 2. Because others may perceive this "arrogant" leader as cold, robotic, and manipulative, many will suggest that the leader does not care about or even understand them. 3. This strength may be perceived as unemotional in others, particularly if the leader is a woman. The gender expectation is that a woman leader is generally more dramatic or more emotion-driven. Food for thought: Do you have thick skin or are you a drama queen? What are the advantages you’ve observed in leaders with thick skin versus the prima donnas? When is it a good idea to have thick skin and when is it a good idea to speak up about unfair comments? Do you notice gender differences in the way men and women control their emotions in the workplace? © 2008 Psychology Today. This RSS Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact blogs@psychologytoday.com so we can take legal action immediately.

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Thick Skin Pays Off in Leadership