Running the Gauntlet

Cougar

The Cat with the Long Tail and the Even Longer Tale: “A mountain lion killed on a Connecticut highway in June was a wild animal from South Dakota that prowled more than 1,500 miles eastward before meeting his death 70 miles from New York City, genetic tests confirmed this week.” (via Reuters).

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Make Way for the Radical Center

My personal hero at the New York Times, Thomas...
 

Thomas Friedman (NYTimes op-ed):  “Did I mention that I’ve signed a pledge — just like those Republican congressmen who have signed written promises to different political enforcers not to raise taxes or permit same-sex marriage? My pledge is to never vote for anyone stupid enough to sign a pledge — thereby abdicating their governing responsibilities in a period of incredibly rapid change and financial stress. Sorry, I’ve signed it. Nothing more I can do.

If this kind of idiocy by elected officials sends you into a hair-pulling rage and leaves you wishing that we had more options today than our two-party system is putting forward — for instance, a party that would have offered a grand bargain on the deficit two years ago, not on the eve of a Treasury default — not only are you not alone, but help may be on the way.”

New Browser Add-ons Save You From the Murdoch Propaganda Machine

Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and Chief Executive O...
Know-Nothing

“MurdochAlert show a warning bar on Murdoch Family-controlled websites. This alerts users to the potential computer security risks of accessing Murdoch-controlled sites. Handy also for identifying the news sources controlled by the Murdoch Family.

This Firefox add-on is the kinder, gentler version of an extension for the Chrome browser released on Wednesday, July 20th called Murdoch Block.  With this installed, if a user happens upon any website owned by the vast international NewsCorp company, a warning screen will appear asking the user if they are sure they want to visit this site. ”  (via NEWS JUNKIE POST)

The 10 greatest “missing movies”

Andrew O’Hehir: “…some of these movies are well and truly missing in that it’s unlikely anyone will ever see them again, others are unavailable on home video because of copyright disputes or other business issues, some exist in a butchered form disavowed by their creators, and some can’t be seen because those who own them simply don’t want you to see them…” (via Salon).

How to Survive the Zombie Apocalypse…

The typical zombie.
…Using Science: ‘In the event of a zombie apocalypse it will probably help to have: a baseball bat, a gun, a chainsaw and a plethora of blunt objects. Also, it helps to possess a strong grasp of neuroscience.The quick, handy guide …(not to be confused with the one from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) shows many of the neurological problems zombies have and how the non-undead can exploit those weaknesses. It includes every malady, from ghouls’ slow motor skills to terrible amnesia.

Believe it or not, the guide to surviving the zombie apocalypse is actually derived from real neuroscience. The charts are largely based on a presentation (see video below) by UC Berkeley neuroscientist Bradley Voytek, who re-created what the zombie brain would look like based on cognitive problems observed in films like 28 Days Later, Shaun of the Dead and The Return of the Living Dead.

Based on that map of the zombie brain, Voytek and a fellow neuroscientist Timothy Verstynen established that the walking dead suffered from a condition they called Consciousness Deficit Hypoactivity Disorder. CDHD is characterized by “the loss of rational, voluntary and conscious behavior replaced by delusional/impulsive aggression, stimulus-driven attention, the inability to coordinate motor-linguistic behaviors and an insatiable appetite for human flesh.” ‘ (via Wired).

“They’re Made Out of Meat”

Amelia Beamer and Terry Bisson
Amelia Beamer and Terry Bisson

‘ “They’re Made Out of Meat” is a Nebula Award-nominated short story by Terry Bisson. It was originally published in OMNI. It consists entirely of dialogue between two characters, and Bisson’s website hosts a theatrical adaptation. A film adaptation won the Grand Prize at the Seattle Science Fiction Museum’s 2006 film festival.

The two characters are sentient beings capable of traveling faster than light, on a mission to “contact, welcome and log in any and all sentient races or multibeings in this quadrant of the Universe.” Bisson’s stage directions represent them as “two lights moving like fireflies among the stars” on a projection screen. They converse briefly on their bizarre discovery of carbon-based life, which they refer to incredulously as “thinking meat”. They agree to “erase the records and forget the whole thing”, marking the Solar System “unoccupied”.

The story was collected in the 1993 anthology Bears Discover Fire and Other Stories, and has circulated widely on the Internet, which Bisson finds “flattering”. It has been quoted in cognitive, cosmological, and philosophical scholarship. ‘ (via Wikipedia)

Here is a link to an mp3 of a reading of the entire story.

Peter Kramer’s Defense of Antidepressants

Cover of Listening to Prozac

“Could drugs that are ingested by one in 10 Americans each year, drugs that have changed the way that mental illness is treated, really be a hoax, a mistake or a concept gone wrong?”  asks Brown University psychiatrist Peter Kramer in this NYTimes.com article. Kramer lambasts the current meme that antidepressants are no better than placebo, especially for mild depression. His major point is that the research on which that conclusion is based was contaminated by a recruitment process that selected many subjects who were not truly depressed. Thus, when followed over time, they got better regardless of whether they were on antidepressants or placebos, obscuring the value of the drugs for truly depressed patients.(For a more sophisticated discussion, in my opinion, of the reasons why there has been a lessening gap between medications and placebos, see this article in Wired by Steve Silberman.)

Kramer is best known for his popular 1993 book, Listening to Prozac, in which he argued that some people feel “better than well” when treated with such medications. In particular, energy, assertiveness and self-confidence can be enhanced even if they were not pathologically diminished before the patient was treated. Kramer discusses the prospect of “cosmetic psychopharmacology” — when a medication can improve socially desirable traits even in people without pathology, should it be used in such a fashion? Raising the issue should inform, narrowly, psychiatrists’ prescribing practices, and, more broadly, both values-based and fiscally-based societal considerations of antidepressant use.

Prozac

Placebo?

Indeed, antidepressant use has continued to grow wildly in the almost two decades since, and with it the windfall for the drugs’ manufacturers. But you will find very few prescribers, consumers or insurance payors who believe this is the “cosmetic” treatment of those who are not truly ill merely to give them an edge in a competitive society. Instead, the trend has been justified by the redrawing of the boundaries of illness so that a far broader set of conditions are said to be medication-responsive. This is a concern whether you are a naive materialist, who believes in the strictly biological explanation for medication efficacy, or if you attribute the benefits to placebo effect and self-fulfilling prophecy. (Despite the fact that I am a psychopharmacologist, I tend to believe we understand so little about the ‘black box’ of the brain that we are a long way away from being able to tell the difference.)

Kramer worries that newly-skeptical physicians affected by the emperor-has-no-clothes backlash against antidepressant use will fail to treat deserving patients appropriately:

“…It is dangerous for the press to hammer away at the theme that antidepressants are placebos. They’re not. To give the impression that they are is to cause needless suffering…”

He centers his article around a vignette in which a friend of his with post-stroke depression had not been placed on an antidepressant despite the research supporting improved outcome. (Notably, I think, unlike what he did in Listening to Prozac, he is not reflecting on his own prescribing practices, merely those of his colleagues.) But if the meme about antidepressant efficacy changes profoundly enough, some patients will not get better even when they are prescribed these medications, because of the undercutting of the self-fulfilling prophecy. And is that a good thing or a bad thing?

Given that my bias in my work is toward treating sicker patients (I work in a hospital with only a limited outpatient practice with the “worried well”), I am among those who decry the creeping medicalization of everyday life. I don’t know if antidepressants are less “effective” in healthier patients because of the diffuseness and ambiguity about the meaning of “effective”. (Throughout psychiatric research, I see profound confusion and lack of consensus about how to measure outcome.) Severely depressed patients, because core aspects of severe depression include pessimism and despondency, are probably far less susceptible to suggestibility. I don’t know if the research has been done but I would suspect that severe depression sabotages the placebo effect. Thus the observed benefit of antidepressants in this class of patients is more likely to be biological. A nervous system out of whack for some reason can probably be rebalanced better with some pharmacological influence that counteracts the imbalance.

BERLIN - NOVEMBER 22:  Singer and guitarist Br...

Placebo (Brian Molko)

In less ill patients, the balance may indeed shift in favor of placebo effects as the basis for observed benefits. But I have another concern, which has fueled my reluctance to prescribe them too readily, about the expansion of antidepressant use in our society. Although the medications are not, in the formal sense of the term, addictive (i.e. they do not hijack the brain’s craving and pleasure circuitry and there is no tolerance and no acute withdrawal syndrome from abrupt discontinuation of use), I have long worried that too readily prescribing antidepressants for those who do not necessarily start out ‘needing’ them may make them ‘need’ them down the line. Think of it this way. The CNS is a homeostatic mechanism. If it is in balance, it resists and counters changes. (Disease is a perturbation in function outside of the range in which it can by intrinsic mechanisms restore itself to homeostasis.) Give antidepressants to a brain in balance, to amp up certain functions, and counteractive mechanisms may be put into play to restore balance. A new set-point may be established that may persist even after the removal of the medication which was the original influence. Someone who did not need the medication in the first place may be converted into someone who does, perhaps for the rest of their life.

It’s Time to End the War on Salt

A salt mill for sea salt.
The zealous drive by politicians to limit our salt intake has little basis in science:  “For decades, policy makers have tried and failed to get Americans to eat less salt. In April 2010 the Institute of Medicine urged the U.S. Food and Drug Administrationto regulate the amount of salt that food manufacturers put into products; New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has already convinced 16 companies to do so voluntarily. But if the U.S. does conquer salt, what will we gain? Bland french fries, for sure. But a healthy nation? Not necessarily.This week a meta-analysis of seven studies involving a total of 6,250 subjects in the American Journal of Hypertension found no strong evidence that cutting salt intake reduces the risk for heart attacks, strokes or death in people with normal or high blood pressure. In May European researchers publishing in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that the less sodium that study subjects excreted in their urine—an excellent measure of prior consumption—the greater their risk was of dying from heart disease. These findings call into question the common wisdom that excess salt is bad for you, but the evidence linking salt to heart disease has always been tenuous.” (via Scientific American).

Mexican Citizen Executed in Texas as Justices Refuse to Intervene

"The Honorable Rick Perry (front right), ...

Hon. (?) Rick Perry

‘In a 5-to-4 decision that split along ideological lines, the Supreme Court on Thursday evening rebuffed a request from the Obama administration that it stay the execution of a Mexican citizen on death row in Texas. The inmate, Humberto Leal Garcia Jr., was executed about an hour later.

The administration had asked the court to delay the execution so that Congress might consider recently introduced legislation that would provide fresh hearings on whether the rights of Mr. Leal and about 50 other Mexican citizens on death row in the United States had been violated.’ (via NYTimes.com).

The Obama administration asserted that this execution makes us international scofflaws, as a signatory to the Vienna Conventions. This is one of the most broadly accepted international agreements, guaranteeing right of consular access to all who are arrested in a foreign country. So what will happen to the next American hiker who wanders over the Iranian border and is detained on espionage charges? But at least Texas Gov. Rick Perry bolsters his Presidential candidacy cred.