The 6th edition of psychology and neuroscience writing carnival Encephalon is now available on Retrospectacle.
Bizarre case of consent
A curious news report from what sounds like a difficult court case:
A man has been acquitted of raping a woman – because she had at least 14 personalities.
In a bizarre case, a jury was told that the 40-year-old man was accused of sexually assaulting the woman 11 times in her home in 2004 while some of her alter egos looked on and at times intervened.
During the District Court trial that finished last Tuesday, the court was told three of the 33-year-old woman’s personalities were present at one of the alleged incidents.
The complainant said two identities had been at other incidents.
Top WA criminal lawyer Judith Fordham, who watched the case, said it was the strangest she had seen.
“Although there have been many cases in our courts where the accused has a mental illness, and some where victims or alleged victims suffer from mental illness, in 20 years as a lawyer I have never seen anything quite like this,” she said.
Multiple personality disorder, now called dissociative identity disorder, is a controversial diagnosis that generally causes confusion whenever it appears in a legal case.
In one famous case, Kenneth Bianchi (the ‘Hillside Strangler’) claimed that he could not be held responsible for a series of murders as another ‘evil’ personality committed the crimes.
He was suspected to be faking and was caught out when a psychologist deliberately fed him the false information that MPD “always” involved more than two personalities.
Another personality ‘appeared’ shortly after and Bianchi was convicted of the murders.
Link to news report from News.com.au (via anomalist).
Link to BBC info on the Bianchi case.
The life and death of Private Harry Farr
The Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine has a pdf of a gripping article on Private Harry Farr, a 25 year-old British soldier shot for cowardice during World War I, despite having being treated for shell-shock.
As with all other WWI soldiers executed for cowardice, Farr was pardoned earlier this year by the British Government.
The article is written by Professor Simon Wessley of King’s College London, who puts the Farr’s court martial and execution in context of the history of World War I, and in the context of what was known about trauma-related psychiatry at the time.
There is little dispute about the sequence of events on 17 September 1916 that led to the execution of Private Farr. Harry Farr was a member of 1st Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment, which was taking part in the battle of the Somme. That day his battalion was moving from their rear positions up to the front line itself. At 9.00 am that morning Farr asked for permission to fall out, saying he was not well. He was sent to see the medical officer, who either found nothing wrong with him, or refused to see him because he had no physical injury‚Äîthe Court Martial papers are unclear on this point. Later that night Farr was found still at the rear, and was again ordered to go the trenches. He refused, telling Regimental Sergeant Major Haking, that he ‘could not stand it’. Then Hanking replied ‘You are a fucking coward and you will go to the trenches. I give fuck all for my life and I give fuck all for yours and I’ll get you fucking well shot’. At 11.00 pm that night a final attempt was made to get Private Farr up to the front line, and he was escorted forward. A fracas broke out between Farr and his escorts, and this time they let him run away. The following morning he was arrested and charged with contravening section 4 (7) of the Army Act ‚Äî showing cowardice in the face of the enemy.
The article discusses why Farr was executed, when over 96% of soldiers convicted of cowardice escaped this punishment, and how the concept of psychological disorder was understood in 1916, particularly by a British Army in a precarious military position.
For more information on shell-shock, and a paper by pioneering WWI military psychiatrist W.H.R. Rivers on the condition, there’s a good overview available here.
pdf of article ‘The life and death of Private Harry Farr’.
Link to shell-shock info from FirstWorldWar.com
Are beautiful people more intelligent?
There’s a curious article from The Guardian on the work of two researchers who are investigating the link between beauty and intelligence, and who argue that a genuine link exists.
Are beautiful people more intelligent than the rest of us? Satoshi Kanazawa and Jody Kovar think so. In a 17-page study called Why Beautiful People Are More Intelligent, they explain bluntly: “Individuals perceive physically attractive others to be more intelligent than physically unattractive others. While most researchers dismiss this perception as a ‘bias’ or ‘stereotype’, we contend that individuals have this perception because beautiful people indeed are more intelligent.”
The full paper is available online as a pdf and there’s a previous write-up from the Washington Post.
It seems the research is largely on the link between beauty and intelligence in females, however.
Link to Guardian article ‘Pretty smart’.
Link to Washington Post article.
pdf of research article.
Brain scan finds vegetative state patient conscious
A team led by neuropsychologist Dr Adrian Owen has reported on a patient who supposedly fulfilled all the criteria for a diagnosis of persistent vegetative state (PVS) but was found to have conscious awareness.
This seems a little confusing to me, as PVS is usually defined as where ‘higher’ cognitive abilities, such as awareness, are not present.
Unfortunately, I can’t read the article in full as I’m still away from home, but I suspect the diagnosis is usually based on observations of external signs of awareness, whereas Owen’s group used fMRI (a type of ‘brain scanning’) to look for changes in brain activation that would not necessarilly result in observable behaviour.
There’s a good write-up over at the BBC site with accompanying video, and for those with access to the full-text of the journal Science the original paper is available online.
This is similar to a recent study (covered previously on Mind Hacks) where researchers found evidence for similar sorts of ‘higher’ cognitive function in two patients in a ‘minimally conscious state‘.
It is likely, however, that all of these patients have suffered some problems with mental function, owing to extensive brain injury.
As psychology and neuroscience are able to measure brain function in more direct ways, rather than solely through observable behaviour, these sorts of coma-like states are likely to be found to be much more complex than previously thought.
However, neither of these conditions should be confused with ‘locked-in syndrome‘, where the cortex of the brain is largely undamaged, but selective damage to the brain stem means that the person cannot move his or her body and is often totally paralysed, despite being mentally intact.
One of the most powerful books I have ever read is the The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, written by the ex-editor of Elle magazine, who suffered a stroke and became ‘locked in’.
He wrote the book by indicating single letters with his only form of movement – an eye blink. The book is a transcendent description of his experience both before and after the onset of his condition.
Bauby died two days after the book was published but left the world with one of its most beautiful and unique literary works.
More Coldplay than Radiohead
The runaway success of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, the book written from the perspective of a young autistic boy, has not entirely pleased its author Mark Haddon:
“I’m just suspicious that too many people liked it. All the books I really like are loathed by some people…It’s like you want to be Radiohead and then you think, shit, I’ve accidentally turned into Coldplay”.
Source: The Week.
defining the field of psychology
Several decades ago, an eminent psychologist defined the field of psychology as ‘a bunch of men standing on piles of their own crap, waving their hands and yelling “Look at me, look at me!”’ Fortunately, things have changed quite a bit over the years, and the field is no longer composed entirely of men.
Daniel Gilbert, Are psychology’s tribes ready to form a nation?, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Vol.6 No.1 January 2002.
Eye gaze and cognition in children
Thanks very much to Robbie Ben for alerting us to the fact that there´s a full article on eye gaze and cognition by Dr Gwyneth Doherty-Sneddon freely available online as a pdf file.
The article was published in The Psychologist in 2004 and discusses much of the background behind Doherty-Sneddon´s work which has led to the research mentioned in the previous post.
pdf of article ‘Don’t look now, I’m trying to think’.
Glazed looks sharpen the mind
There’s an interesting news report on the Nature website suggesting that gazing into the middle distance improves concentration.
Researchers at the University of Stirling in Scotland took a group of 25 five-year-olds and trained them to look away when they were being asked a question. The effect was a significant increase in correct answers to mental arithmetic questions, says Gwyneth Doherty-Sneddon, who led the research. She declined to give details as the work is in press with the British Journal of Developmental Psychology.
It strikes me as a bit strange that someone would decline to give details because the paper is ‘in press’.
When a paper is ‘in press’ it means that it has been reviewed by independent scientists and declared to be worthy of publication.
It is standard practice for researchers give out ‘pre-prints’ of the research papers to anyone who asks at this stage and it is considered a little obstructive to refuse.
Despite this strangeness, it seems like an interesting study and I’ll look forward to reading it when it is finally published.
Link to news report from Nature.
Sevillian intelligence
Many thanks to Sevillian computational neuroscientists Marcos and Jorge who kindly talked me through their information processing model of the neocortex yesterday.
There will be more information on their exciting project appearing here shortly.
Keeping it in the family
[Paramutation] describes an interaction between different alleles or even different loci [areas on a chromosome], which results in a stable alteration in their functional state… Consequently, the properties of an inherited gene may in part be dependent on a gene sequence that is not actually co-inherited. Clearly, this flouts what we generally think of as genetic inheritance. Furthermore, if parental experiences affect the expression of RNA molecules involved in RNA induced DNA silencing, it is conceivable that heritable changes in gene activity might result from environmental stimuli.
An excerpt from p21 of Psychiatric Genetics and Genomics (ISBN 0198564864) that describes a potential way that experience could affect the genetic information that gets inherited by the next generation.
This is part of a largely unexplored area known as epigenetics which examines the biochemistry of gene expression.
It is thought that understanding epigenetics will be crucial for working out the genetic influences on mind and brain function.
Encephalon 5th edition
Just a quick note to say that the 5th Encephalon neuroscience writing carnival has been published at Developing Intelligence.
Head over there for the latest writing from online neuroscientists…
Hospital de la Caridad
The Hospital de la Caridad was founded in 1674 by Don Miguel de Mañara to care for physically and mentally ill of Seville who were too poor to afford treatment.
Don Miguel de Mañara was supposedly the inspiration for Byron´s Don Juan as he left a life of debauchery to found the hospital after having an intense religious vision in which he saw his own funeral procession.
He subsequently built the hospital and adjoining church and dedicated his life to charity and the religious order that runs the institution.
The church and hospital are still working, although it now focuses on caring for the elderly of Seville.
Link to Hospital de la Caridad website.
Me voy a España
I am off to deepest Seville for two weeks and I’m not sure how much internet access I will have. As a consequence, updates might be a little sporadic and I suspect will be without illustrations as I doubt I’ll have decent image editing software to hand.
In the mean time, here’s a few articles of interest for those curious about psychology and psychiatry in Spain.
* An article [pdf] about professional psychology in contemporary Spain.
* A piece from The Guardian about a bizarre chapter in the history of Spanish psychiatry where Franco’s psychiatrist tried to prove leftists were clinically mad.
* An abstract from a 1945 American Journal of Psychiatry paper on Spain as the ‘cradle of psychiatry’.
PsyArt for the psychology of art
PsyArt is an online journal dedicated the use of psychology in understanding the impact and meaning of art.
It’s a peer-reviewed journal which has been publishing quality analyses of the art-psychology borderlands for almost a decade now.
The full-text articles are freely available online, meaning you can pass on the links and read the full papers without a subscription.
Recent article include The Silence of Madness in ‘Signs and Symbols’ by Vladimir Nabokov [link] and Perspectivism ‚Äî A Powerful Cognitive Metaphor [link].
Link to PsyArt journal.
Psychosis and psychoanalysis
I’ve always been slightly suspicious about the Freudian tendency to read meaning into everything. You see hidden meanings and get paid for it and you’re an analyst, you do it for free and you’re psychotic.
I suspect this is why there’s so little psychoanalytic work on psychosis, the infinite regress of hidden meanings would probably cause a dimensional rift and the universe would collapse.