Quick links from the past week in mind and brain news:

The Nobel Prize website has an online game to illustrate Roger Sperry’s work on split-brain patients – with Mr Split-Brainy!
Brian Ethics has a cutting-edge update on the science of genetic influences on mind and brain.
American Scientist talks to neuroscientist Eric Kandel about his current reads and favourite books.
The synaesthesia-like links between taste and smell are investigated by Cognitive Daily’s faultless account of a recent scientific study.
New campaign video for wonder drug Panexa hits the net.
Ultra-sensitive material may pave the way for remote human touch technology.
The increasingly compulsive Developing Intelligence tags up a series of recent posts on neuroscience and transhumanism.
The brain’s left caudate may mediate the switch between language in bilingual speakers, reports Science.
Dosing someone with coffee or another strongly caffeinated drink may make them more susceptible to persuasion, according to a recent study,
Wired magazine has an
Having ‘uncontrollable’ angry outbursts meets the 
The UK’s Dana Centre regularly hosts free science events for the public and has been webcasting them live. They’ve now put the 
Delivery driver Gary Harris was suffering vomiting and headaches but was told he would have to wait 11 weeks for an NHS brain scan, so his workmates had a whip-round and collected enough money for a private scan – which 
Petra also tells me that there’s a
The London-based Dana Centre will be hosting a number of events on the science of sex over the coming month for those interested in gender, reproduction and passion.
The excellent ABC Radio National
The Anxiety, Addiction and Depression Treatments blog has a
The idea that the mind is the result of the function of the brain is so widely accepted within neuroscience as to almost be its defining statement. It’s suprising then when you find someone who’s arguing against this idea in a coherent and thoughtful manner.