study

The Placebo Effect 

brainscape.com Placebos are drugs or other sources of treatment that are physically and pharmacologically inert, without any direct therapeutic effects. The neurobiological mechanisms of the placebo effect remain a matter of great research interest. The placebo response is a set of complex psycho-neurobiological mechanisms; it is believed that verbal suggestions and conditioning cues [...]

By |2015-08-27T15:30:50+10:00August 27th, 2015|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Study Shows Staring into Someone’s Eyes for a Long Time Can Cause Hallucinations

VIGNESH JATHAVAR, play.google.com When two people stare into one another's eyes for a long period of time, both can experience disassociation symptoms and hallucinations. - Bob Yirka Source: Study shows staring into someone's eyes for a long time can cause hallucinations

People Mean Most for Our Collective Happiness

IOANA ON, free-meditation.ca Swedish soccer star Zlatan is associated with happiness, but not iPhones. A new study at the Sahlgrenska Academy and Lund University suggests that our collective picture of what makes us happy is more about relationships, and less about things. News articles published online by Swedish dailies during 2010 were analyzed [...]

Cultural and Economic Factors Affect European Antidepressant Use

The study found that antidepressants were prescribed more often and used more regularly in countries with higher levels of healthcare spending. In addition, beliefs that people with a mental illness are 'dangerous' were associated with higher use, whereas attitudes that they 'never recover' or 'have themselves to blame' were associated with lower and less regular [...]

Patients with Recurrent Depression Have Smaller Hippocampi

The brains of people with recurrent depression have a significantly smaller hippocampus (the part of the brain most associated with forming new memories) than healthy individuals, according to a study of nearly 9,000 people called the ENIGMA study. - News Staff Source: Patients With Recurrent Depression Have Smaller Hippocampi

By |2015-07-06T14:11:42+10:00July 5th, 2015|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Scientists Have Discovered How The Month You’re Born Matters For Your Health

A new study suggests that your birth month has a connection with the diseases you might develop in your lifetime. - Ana Swanson Source: Scientists have discovered how the month you're born matters for your health I The Sydney Morning Herald

After Learning New Words, Brain Sees Them as Pictures

When we look at a known word, our brain sees it like a picture, not a group of letters needing to be processed. That's the finding from a Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC) study published in the Journal of Neuroscience, which shows the brain learns words quickly by tuning neurons to respond to a complete [...]

By |2015-06-21T14:22:18+10:00June 21st, 2015|Categories: Science & Research|Tags: , , , , , , |1 Comment

Cannabis Use Can Be Prevented, Reduced or Delayed

Responding to rapidly shifting legal and cultural environments, researchers at the University of Montreal and CHU Sainte-Justine Children's Hospital have found a way to prevent, reduce or delay cannabis use amongst some at-risk youth. Cannabis users are at risk of neurocognitive deficits, reduced educational and occupational attainment, motor vehicle accidents, exacerbation of psychiatric symptoms, and [...]

Parenting Style Teaches Kids To Draw On Strengths To Manage Stress

A new Australian study suggests a parenting style that identifies and cultivates the strengths of a child can teach children how to be resilient and deal with stress. Lea Waters, Ph.D., from the Melbourne Graduate School of Education explained how children can draw on their personal strengths to cope with the demands that lead to [...]

By |2016-12-19T15:31:42+11:00June 3rd, 2015|Categories: Society & Culture|Tags: , , , , , |0 Comments

Stress, Depression Boost Risks for Heart Patients

For people with heart disease, high levels of stress coupled with depression increase the risk of heart attack and death, according to a new study. “We found that the combination of high stress and high depression symptoms was particularly harmful for adults with heart disease during an early vulnerability period,” said lead author Carmela Alcantara [...]

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