Here’s an interesting story about analyzing the link between social connections.
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Here’s an article discussing how the current financial models failed us.
Wall Street’s Math Wizards Forgot a Few Variables
Behavorial economics and finance are going to start booming.
If you’ve ever had a discussion about something controversial – politics, religion, life/death – you’ll often find that there is never really any progress made on either side of the argument. That’s usually because each side has a deeply rooted emotional belief in their viewpoint and they don’t change their mind to arguments of logic and reason. Weirdly enough, the only facts they listen to are the that support their original viewpoint.
Here is an article discussing that issue. If you’ve followed Tversky and Kahneman, you’ll be familiar with some of the ideas.
Link: How We Support Our False Beliefs
Also, here’s an extended discussion based on the article but using it to discuss topics in medicine. Interesting read.
Link: “There must be a reason,” or how we support our own false beliefs
Here’s another one of those inevitable studies that surface every year. When new technologies start to gain market share, it seems the academics study the effects on human intelligence. I think someone should collect all the papers written over the years and see how many times people are complaining that television, cell phones, radio, gaming, the web, MySpace, Facebook, and Twitter are making us stupid.
Link:
Facebook ‘enhances intelligence’ but Twitter ‘diminishes it’, claims psychologist
Wired has an excellent article on the Allen Institute for Brain Science’s ambitious mission to map where each gene is expressed in the brain.
We tend to think of genes in terms of their ability to pass on characteristics to new generations, but the moment the egg and the sperm combine, genes start coding for proteins which the body uses to do its work.
Of course, this includes the brain, so knowing what type of genes produce proteins in which areas of the brain gives us a big clue to some of the brain’s functions.
The article is, perhaps, a little overly hopeful about the significance of a having a gene map for understanding complex mind functions or disorders (autism is mentioned as an example) – suggesting that some research hits a dead end without it.
Perhaps something useful to mention is that one of the key pieces in the puzzle of gene expression in the brain is not where genes are expressed but under what conditions they are expressed.
While your DNA has the ability to express every protein it has genes for, the cell regulates this process so it reacts to current conditions dynamically.
In other words, the genes are more of a reference book, and the cell’s other regulation processes decide how and when to use this information.
As far as we know, all learning in the brain happens through proteins, meaning that experience, learning, thought, motivation – or any other ‘psychological level’ process we can think of, acts through the many, complex and not fully understood regulation processes.
So understanding the reference book is an essential but insufficient part of the picture. The real deal is in understanding how the brain’s cellular workers use the information to mediate between genes and the processes we understand at the psychological, behavioural or experiential level.
This is part of the new science of epigenetics, and there are high hopes that this will be a big part of future neurobiology.
This doesn’t imply that we don’t need to understand the role of experience and the environment in deference to purely reductionist neurobiological models. In fact, these new developments have stressed the importance of integrating these bigger concepts.
And this is largely because we now have the beginnings of a science that could help us make links between these different levels of explanation.
Nevertheless, the Allen Brain Atlas is an important and exciting part of this new science and the Wired article is a great introduction to the project.
Link to Wired article ‘Scientists Map the Brain, Gene by Gene’.
Link to Wired image gallery of the Allen project.
Bad Science has a great article on the ‘copycat suicide’ effect, where media reporting of suicide can increase the chances of suicide in other people.
Copycat suicide is sometimes called the ‘Werther Effect’, after Goethe published his 1774 novel ‘The Sorrows of Young Werther’ which depicted Werther’s suicide and was reportedly followed by people imitating the same method to end their lives.
It’s an interesting effect because it shows the influence on the media on what people usually think of the most extreme of decisions.
An excellent 2003 review article on the subject found that the effect holds for all media reports of suicides (including fictional ones) but celebrity suicide is most associated with subsequent deaths. Interestingly, it notes that the largest known increase followed the death of Marilyn Monroe.
The review also found found that the greater the coverage of the suicide, and the more details in the reporting, the larger the increase in subsequent deaths.
Because of this, there are now media guidelines for reporting suicide, and the Bad Science article reports on a particularly bad example where the journalist reported exactly the sort of thing most associated with increased risk in a single story – virtually nothing except details of the suicide method.
One of the most interesting bits of the Bad Science piece doesn’t appear in the print version. However, it discusses research that found the majority of people who attempt suicide and survive are pleased they did some years later:
There is a literature which I think is extremely powerful, and yet unanimously ignored by mainstream media, and that is the follow-up data on what happens later in life to people who have felt so suicidal that they have made serious attempts on their own lives.
In extremis Pajonk et al followed up a large number of people who they picked up in intensive care after very serious suicide attempts. Amongst those who survived, and did not have serious psychotic illnesses, six years later, the majority were happy and well, living productive family lives, and were – we might reasonably interpolate – glad to be alive.
Link to Bad Science article on media reporting of suicide.
Link to review article on media and suicide (with open-access link).
