Rorschach inkblot t-shirt

rorschach_t-shirt.jpgThe Imaginary Foundation has just produced a new series of t-shirts including one that involves a psychedelic riff on the Rorschach inkblot test.

The Rorschach inkblot test is a now almost obselete test in psychology where interviewees are asked to give their impressions of a series of ambiguously shaped inkblots.

As there are few reliably ways of interpreting answers to each inkblot, it has been argued that the test is nothing more than the assessor’s subjective impression masquerading as an objective psychometric test.

Hence it has been virtually discarded in modern psychology, although remains strongly associated with the discipline in everyday stereotypes.

It does, however, make for a beautiful garment when interpreted by the Imaginary Foundation’s wonderfully askew artists.

Link to Imaginary Foundation ‘Rorschach Girl’ t-shirt.

Science and Consciousness Review lives!

scr_logo.jpgQuality online cognitive science site Science and Consciousness Review has arisen phoenix-like from the ashes after a nasty database crash.

The outage removed it from the internet for several months, but it is now back in action, serving up the latest in news and views in consciousness and cognitive science research.

In fact, it’s just alerted me to the announcement of the 2007 visual illusion contest which also includes last year’s winners on their website.

Link to Science and Consciousness Review.

Does breastfeeding cause or correlate with benefits?

adult_baby_hand.jpgThere’s an interesting piece on BBC News that has a different take on the two breastfeeding stories we ran recently that suggested that breastfeeding during the early years might aid brain development and reduce risk for mental illness.

A study published this week in the British Medical Journal suggests that the advantage of breastfeeding on baby’s intelligence could be explained not by the effect of breastmilk on the infant’s developing brain, but by the fact that women who breastfeed are more likely to have higher IQs.

This is perhaps because IQ is correlated with social and economic class, and people in these classes are generally more likely to follow health advice promoted in education campaigns.

Hence, these babies might just be more likely to inherit neurodevelopmental advantages from their mothers (IQ is known to be partially heritable), and are probably more likely to benefit from a range of other factors which better socioeconomic conditions bring.

I suspect that advantage seen in breastfed babies might be a combination of social and genetic factors, as well as the effects of breastmilk.

We know that good nutrition in the early years is crucial to good brain development and breastmilk is a tailor-made for the purpose.

However, the brain also develops through interaction with the environment, so this nutritional advantage has to be balanced against social and educational experience.

Link to BBC News story “Breast milk ‘does not boost IQ'”.
Link to abstract of original study from BMJ.

The genetics of hair pulling and vagaries of reporting

light_hair.jpgThe BBC has a news story on the genetics of a disorder called trichotillomania (compulsive hair-pulling) that typifies the way genetics discoveries are reported in the media.

First sentence:

Scientists have identified gene mutations responsible for a psychiatric disorder that causes people to compulsively pull their own hair.

Way down the article:

Dr Allison Ashley-Koch, who also worked on the study, said numerous other genes were likely to contribute to the condition. She said: “The SLITRK1 gene could be among many other genes that are likely interact with each other and environmental factors to trigger trichotillomania and other psychiatric conditions.

No prizes for guessing which is the most accurate and which makes the best headline copy.

In almost any news story you read that says ‘gene found for psychiatric disorder X’ read ‘a gene has been identified which seems to explain some of the risk for developing X’ – unless it specifically says otherwise.

Link to BBC News article ‘Hair pulling disorder gene found’.
Link to more information on trichotillomania.

2006-10-06 Spike activity

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

spike.jpg

ABC Radio’s All in the Mind tackles the mind-body problem in an engaging debate.

Wired Magazine with an appallingly-titled article on the neuropsychology of pathopaths: ‘Psychos Need a Little Sympathy’.

On the irony! US Government funded study concludes that conservatism can be explained psychologically as a set of neuroses rooted in “fear and aggression, dogmatism and the intolerance of ambiguity”.

The ‘BBC Prison study’, a re-run of Milgram’s Zimbardo’s famous Stanford Prison experiment (doh! thanks Pedro), is written up in The Psychologist: Tyranny revisited.

Developing Intelligence looks at the nature / nurture interaction in language learning theories.

The New York Times has an article on ‘compulsive shopping disorder’.

There is a God: curry may be neuroprotective – reports The Neurophilosopher.

Amazing brain writing prize

Do you fancy winning ¬£250 for writing a short article about brain science? If so, this could be for you – the website ‘Your Amazing Brain’, hosted by the science exhibition centre @Bristol, together with the European Dana Alliance for the Brain, and The British Neuroscience Association, are looking for a newspaper style science article of around 650 words on the subject of brain science. There are two categories – the first anyone can enter (except professional writers), whereas the second is for researchers writing about their own area of research. Both have a winning prize of ¬£250 and your article will be published all over the place. But get cracking, the deadline is the end of this month.

Link to full details.

Gallery Space Recall

half_what_logo.jpgI’ve been collaborating with artist Simon Pope over the last few months and have been working on a project that aims to investigate the interaction between memory and location, and how this relationship can become fractured and renewed in psychosis.

The first event, called Gallery Space Recall, happens tomorrow in Chapter Art Gallery in Cardiff and everyone is invited.

Simon is particularly well-known for his use of walking as a visual art practice (and wrote the wonderful guide to exploring London’s psyche London Walking).

One particular form of delusion that occurs after brain injury seems to cause a rift in the normal pattern of understanding location, most likely owing to a disturbance in the brain’s memory structures.

Reduplicative paramnesia is the delusional belief that a place exists in two or more locations simultaneously and has been the inspiration for the project where we will try and get participants to hold contrasting and contradictory memories of a past location in mind, while experiencing movement through a current space.

The project also asks questions about the difference between delusion, psychosis and supposedly ‘normal’ mental states, and how they relate to our own memories of location and place.

By highlighting the universal influence of memory on our experience of the world, the project hopes to better understand the normal function of memory, and emphasises the common experience of the ‘mad’ and the ‘sane’.

Where is the line between delusion and reality when we only have our memories to rely on?

There are more stages of the project planned (and more events), some of which you can read about here, so we’ll keep you updated as the project moves on.

Link to details of ‘Gallery Space Recall’ event.
Link to Walking Here and There.

NewSci on confabulation and memory distortion

newsci_20061007.jpgThere’s an interesting cover story in today’s New Scientist about the neuropsychology of confabulation – the curious condition where patients give completely false narratives of situations that they think they remember.

The condition is usually associated with brain injury, often to the frontal lobes. In contrast to delusions, these false narratives are not usually fixed, so you might get different false memories given in answer to the same question asked several times.

Sadly, the NewSci article is not freely available online, so you’ll need to pick up a copy at your local library or newsagent if you want to read it.

However, the article is largely a summary of William Hirstein’s recent book Brain Fiction that tackles the subject in some depth (although a little haphazardly in places it has to be said – I’m still baffled as to why he specifically singles-out Capgras delusion as a form of confabulation).

There is much excellent reading inside though, and the first chapter of the book (entitled ‘What is confabulation?’) is freely available online if you want to get a better idea about this condition.

Link to details of Brain Fiction with sample chapter.
Link to intro to the NewSci article.

From sci-fi footnote to cutting-edge vision science

hoyle_black_cloud.jpgThere’s a fascinating letter in today’s Nature about how a footnote in one of Fred Hoyle’s science fiction novels inspired a branch of research in vision science on how the brain estimates when moving objects will arrive at a certain point.

The characters in the book discover an ominous black cloud that appears to be heading towards Earth. Will the cloud hit Earth and, if so, when? The first question is solved when the characters examine the relative speed at which the cloud is translating across the night sky to the rate at which it is looming, or seeming to get larger. The second question is tackled with a bit of impromptu algebra in which the time until impact is calculated from the ratio of the current size of the cloud to its rate of change…

David Lee realized in the 1970s that the brain can use the ratio of size to its rate of change, previously identified by Hoyle, to estimate the imminence of arrival. David Regan realized soon afterwards that the brain can use the ratio of lateral speed to looming rate to calculate where an object is travelling….

Since the early work of Lee and Regan, a considerable amount of research in areas including psychophysics, motor action, neurophysiology and computational modelling has followed (see D. Regan and R. Gray Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4, 99–107; 2000). The whole body of work that exists today can be traced back to a casual footnote and a couple of sketches in a science-fiction novel.

Fred Hoyle was a professional astronomer working at Cambridge University so knew plenty about mathematics, but wrote a number of notable science fiction novels during his lifetime.

The full letter is freely available at the following link.

Link to Nature letter ‘Hoyle’s observations were right on the ball’

Stephen Fry’s ‘Secret Life’ bittorrent available

It seems Stephen Fry’s two-part BBC documentary ‘The Secret Life of a Manic Depressive’ on the science, treatment and experience of bipolar disorder is available online as bittorrents (part 1 and part 2).

We reported on the documentary previously on Mind Hacks, and there’s more about bittorrent here if you’ve not heard of it before.

The programme does a fantastic job of breaking down some of the myths and tackling stigma, and contains a remarkable breadth of opinion on all aspects of the condition. Well worth watching.

2006 – Essential sites for students

spiral_bound_notebooks.jpgFollowing on from last year’s successful ‘essential sites’ round up, Mind Hacks presents our 2006 list of essential websites for mind and brain students, just in time for the new academic year.

Whether you’re a future graduate psychologist, a hardened lab-based neuroscientist or are in the midst of studying any of the cognitive sciences, we should have something to help you on your way.

Continue reading “2006 – Essential sites for students”

A drowsy state of consciousness

grassy_dreams.jpgABC Radio’s The Philospher’s Zone has just had a two-part special on the problem of consciousness – with particular reference to sleep.

The first and second parts are both from a talk by Professor Giulio Tononi, a neuroscientist from the University of Wisconsin Madison.

Tononi discusses particular difficulties in looking for the ‘neural correlates of consciousness’ and particularly addresses what sleep tells us about conscious states.

In fact, Tononi heads up the Centre for Sleep and Consciousness that aims to understand “the mechanisms and functions of sleep and the neural substrates of consciousness” and gives a fascinating run-through of some of his most recent thinking on the area.

UPDATE: The first part seems to have disappeared off the website. The second part works just as well on its own, however.

Link to Part 1: ‘Higher levels of consciousness’.
Link to Part 2: ‘How Not To Be Unconscious’.

Feeling the heat: sexual arousal in men and women

sexy_black_girl.jpgNew Scientist reports on research recently presented at the Canadian Sex Research Forum that suggests that men and women take about the same time to reach the maximum level of sexual arousal.

The researchers, led by Tuuli Kukkonen, used a thermal imaging camera to measure increased blood flow in the genitals while participants were watching erotic films.

Although the report doesn’t say, it’s common in these sorts of studies for the male and female participants to be shown different films, as males and females tend to be maximally aroused by different types of erotica.

Both the film shown to males, and the film shown to females, will likely have been rated by members of the same sex for how arousing it is, and the films will have been chosen to match the levels of arousal for men and women.

What the report doesn’t say is that the researchers seemed only to have measured physical arousal.

This is important, as we have known since the eighties that while men typically feel psychologically aroused when they’re physically aroused, women can be physically aroused while not feeling psychologically turned-on in the slightest.

In other words, women can show physical arousal without feeling sexy at all. This rarely happens with men.

In fact, a recent study reported that physical arousal in females seems a relatively automatic response to viewing any sort of sexual activity, gay, straight, male or female, despite the fact that the reported level of psychological arousal varied considerably.

Women in this study even showed some physical sexual arousal when watching a video of mating chimpanzees, despite reporting that they felt less sexy than when watching neutral videos of landscapes and scenery.

Why there is such a marked difference in feeling sexy and being aroused in women is still a mystery, but it is something that needs to be borne in mind when interpreting any study (and particularly, any news story) that talks about ‘sexual arousal’ as a single type of experience.

Unfortunately, Kukkonen and colleagues’ study seems to have been widely and uncritically reported as suggesting that women get ‘hot’ in about the same time as men do, when in fact, the picture is far more complex.

Link to NewSci story ‘Women become sexually aroused as quickly as men’.

Best out of 3: BPS Research Digest special

bunch_balloons.jpgThere’s a new edition of the British Psychological Society’s Research Digest available online, with the usual collection of updates on the world of psychology research, as well as some special articles by guest writers to celebrate three years of the Digest.

Christian has asked a number of online writers to think of a study from the last three years which has inspired them or changed the way they think about psychology.

First up is Dave and Greta Munger from Cognitive Daily who discuss the startling effect of ‘boundary extension’ – “when you see a scene such as a photograph or even a three-dimensional representation with a clear border, then your memory of that scene tends to extend beyond the original boundary: you remember the scene as larger than it actually was, sometimes even just a few seconds after seeing it.”

They’ll also be forthcoming articles to be published shortly by Dryden Badenoch of The Relaxed Therapist, Jeremy Dean of PsyBlog, Will Meek of Staff Psychologist, Chris Chatham of Developing Intelligence and a short article by me covering a wonderful study on dopamine, stress and unusual experiences.

As well as launching the anniversary special series, there’s also the usual selection of research updates.

This fortnight has articles on a study on the psychology of graphical online interaction (conducted by one of the pioneers of the field, Nick Yee), the widely reported induced ‘shadow self’ experiment, the use of complementary medicine, a study of how much money affects your happiness, the effects of musical tuition on brain development and a study on memory decline in old age.

Link to the BPS Research Digest.

Great neuroaesthetics primer

abstract_texture_1.jpgBrain Ethics has a fantastic primer on neuroaesthetics for those wanting a concise introduction to the field that attempts to use neuroscience to understand art and aesthetic behaviour.

This is currently an exciting but fragmented field and Martin Skov gives an excellent account of the current state of understanding, as well as a guide to the best books available if you want to continue investigating yourself.

Neuroaesthetics can be thought of as a part of a more general study of art and aesthetics as a biological phenomenon. I will follow other proponents of this view (such as Tecumseh Fitch) in calling this broader approach bioaesthetics. The overall goal of bioaesthetics is to answer the three basic biological questions – what?, how?, why? – in regard to aesthetic behaviour in humans: what is art and aesthetics?; how does art and aesthetics spring from the brain?; and why did this cognitive ability evolve in humans?

Link to ‘A short bibliographic guide to the emerging field of bioaesthetics’.