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Neuroscience news from science and industry impacting man's understanding of his brain and himself.

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Brain Books

  • Kay Redfield Jamison: Exuberance : The Passion for Life

    Kay Redfield Jamison: Exuberance : The Passion for Life

  • Oliver Sacks: Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat

    Oliver Sacks: Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat

  • : Neuroscience

    Neuroscience

  • Jeff Hawkins: On Intelligence

    Jeff Hawkins: On Intelligence

  • Eric R. Kandel: Principles of Neural Science

    Eric R. Kandel: Principles of Neural Science

  • John D. Gartner: The Hypomanic Edge : The Link Between (A Little) Craziness and (A Lot of) Success in America

    John D. Gartner: The Hypomanic Edge : The Link Between (A Little) Craziness and (A Lot of) Success in America

  • Peter Dayan: Theoretical Neuroscience

    Peter Dayan: Theoretical Neuroscience

  • Frank T. Vertosick: When the Air Hits Your Brain

    Frank T. Vertosick: When the Air Hits Your Brain

Organizations

  • American Stroke Association
  • National Multiple Sclerosis Society
  • Huntington's Disease Society
  • Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation
  • Epilepsy Foundation
  • Brain Trauma Foundation
  • Autism Society of America
  • Alzheimer's Association

Neuro Stocks

  • Advanced Neuromodulation Systems
  • Axonyx
  • Cephalon
  • Cortex Pharmaceuticals
  • Curis
  • Cyberkinetics Neurotechnology Systems, Inc.
  • Cyberonics
  • DOV Pharmaceutical
  • Guildford Pharmaceuticals
  • Memory Pharmaceuticals
  • Neurobiological Technologies
  • Neurocrine Biosciences
  • Neurogen
  • NeuroMetrix
  • Pharmos
  • Renovis

Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig [BOOK RECOMMENDATION]

Luckiest Man : The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig

The final chapters of a newly published biography of baseball legend Lou Gehrig describes in intimate and inspiring details the baseball legend's struggle with the disease that would borrow his name during the two years after he retired from the sport. These details emerge from never before published correspondence with his doctor which also shed light on experimental treatments and the medical ethics prevailing at the time. It is retching to see how doctors and spouses often hid medical realities from patients in a way that today would not be common.

Read more about or order from Amazon

March 29, 2005 in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Books | Permalink | Comments (37) | TrackBack (0)

American Mania: Book Recommendation

Psychiatrist Peter Whybrow argues that Americans are addictively driven by the brain's pleasure centers to live turbocharged lives in pursuit of status and possessions at the expense of the only things that can truly make us happy: relationships with other people.

People are biologically wired to want more, he contends. We seek more than we need because consumption activates the neurotransmitter dopamine, which rewards us with pleasure. Historically, he says, built-in social brakes reined in our acquisitive instincts. In the capitalist utopia envisioned by Adam Smith in the 18th century, self-interest was tempered by the competing demands of the marketplace and community. But with globalization, the idea of doing business with neighbors one must face the next day is a quaint memory, and all bets are off.  Whybrow sees the Enrons and the Worldcoms- the mess left by unfettered capitalism- therefore, not as a moral problem, but as a behavioral one.

Other countries are prey to the same forces, Dr. Whybrow says, but the problem is worse here because we are a nation of immigrants, genetically self-selected to favor individualism and novelty. Americans are competitive, restless and driven to succeed. And we have succeeded.

The result, he argues, is that the country is on the downswing of a manic episode set off by the Internet bubble of the 1990's.

Excerpted from New York Times Review . Read more or purchase from Amazon.com

March 13, 2005 in Books, Public Policy | Permalink | Comments (0)

How Liberals and Conservatives Think: Book Recommendation

This application of cognitive science to politics compares the unconscious and rhetorical worldviews of liberals and conservatives, revealing radically different but remarkably consistent conceptions of morality on the left and right.  The analysis argues that the differences are not mere matters of partisanship, but arise from radically different conceptions of the ideal family life.  The author concludes that familial morality, therefore, is at the heart of American politics more so than mere partisanship, in ways that are far from obvious.

Read more or order from Amazon.com

January 02, 2005 in Books, Public Policy | Permalink | Comments (0)

Recent Posts

  • Results Bolster Tysabri for Multiple Sclerosis
  • Walking Robot Goes on Sale in Japan
  • Diffusion MRI Can Track Brain Tumor Treatments
  • A Rare Buff of Smoke Threatens Stroke
  • Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig [BOOK RECOMMENDATION]
  • 75% Lose Sleep
  • 80 Multiple Sclerosis Genes Identified
  • Harvard Bedamned: Brains do Differ in Boys and Girls
  • Imaging May Mark Onset of Schizophrenia
  • Company: Neuren Pharmaceuticals Seeks to Protect Damaged Neurons
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