More fun from the NYT in the spirit of Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers (but in this crappy economy, a hopeful tagline: Chronic stress changes the brain, but relaxation can change it back.)
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A recent article in the New York Times reported results from an APA study that concluded that abortion does not cause mental illness. The full title of the article is “Abortion Does Not Cause Mental Illness, Panel Says.” Maybe I am being paranoid, but somehow that title calls the results into question (as in, “a panel claims this, but we’re still not sure”). However, in the brief summary, the author points out that these results are the same as results from a large scale review of evidence in 1990. So, why are we continuing to ask this question? Is it because conservative forces are hoping that we’ll find something that gives credence to the idea that women shouldn’t have control over their own bodies? Given that this finding has been replicated in two large studies now, for my money, I’d rather invest in exploring mental health consequences of issues that have less to do with partisan politics and more to do with actual risk.
Since this website is supposed to be about sound as well as science, I’m excited to announce that most of the slides and podcasts for the Neuroimaging Training Program Summer Course at UCLA are up on the web! Enjoy the sound and slides of experts from around the world as they discuss methods relevant to neuroimaging research.
The itunes link is here. Note, slides and podcasts from last year’s course are available at the iTunes link as well.
I recently posted a summary of an article that I found interesting and likely to bring out some healthy controversy at PsychInAction. The article was about differences in the ways that liberals and conservatives process information (in the brain). The basic finding was that people who identified as conservative (compared to those who identified as liberal) showed less activity in a brain area that has previously been related to cognitive control during a task that requires one to inhibit a certain prepotent response (basically, you need to switch gears and restrain yourself from the habitual response). In concluding, the authors suggest that while liberals performed better on the laboratory task that required response inhibition, the conservatives in their sample would likely perform better on a task where a fixed response style is optimal.
As with many brain studies, there are several caveats and logical fallacies that are easy to fall into (see here for a discussion of what we can and can’t say with brain data), but in an informal lecture, even scientifically-conservative Russ lamented recently that in order to get papers in places like Nature, we, as scientists need to argue for why our findings are cool and worth the space they take to print in the absence of space to list all of the constraints, assumptions, and other details that might help people fully understand all of the limitations of a given dataset. So, while we should stick closely to our data and not make wild claims about what the brain has to tell us about social scientific questions, using brain data to generate new hypotheses (that are later tested) is how science can move forward.
The study described above is not perfect (would be interesting to see with a larger sample and to know more about third variable personality factors), and it is interesting to consider counter examples (as one colleague pointed out, it would be easy to argue that some religious conservatives show incredible flexibility in taking from the Bible), but I think as scientists, in addition to poking holes in the methods of others (a necessary set of checks and balances), we should also be considering how different methods can inform one another and how to test alternative hypotheses if we don’t believe the findings of published work.
There are direct relationships between where you fall in the socioeconomic hierarchy and your health. There are also relationships between whether you are a man or a woman, and where you fall on this hierarchy. Lastly, there are relationships between gender and health. How do gender and socioeconomic status interact to give some people a better shot at a healthy life? The attached files are from a talk I gave on this topic, as well as a reference list to accompany the slides. Please feel free to email or post with questions.
Recent work by Bob Kaplan and Dominick Frosch suggests that when patients and doctors work together to make decisions, everyone wins. More…
A few of us in the psychology department at UCLA have decided to combine our blogging efforts. Our site, which is probably going to be more psych oriented than what you’ll find here, can be found at http://PsychInAction.Wordpress.com
Enjoy!
I have recently read a bunch of articles about placebo effects and pain. In the case of pain, placebo effects can be remarkable. In fact, pain-sensitive brain regions are less active when people receive pain and a placebo, compared to the equivalent pain without a placebo. Furthermore, in anticipating pain with a placebo, pre-frontal control regions are more active, which may serve to regulate the experience of pain and/ or to trigger the body’s own anti-pain medication (opioids).
Interestingly, placebo effects can be both positive (as in you feel better after taking a non-active pill, receiving an irrelevant intervention), or negative (you feel side effects from taking the pill, just as with regular meds). Also, placebo effects are often dose-response, and can have time-effect curves, and carryover effects, just like active medications.
This brings me to the topic of mind body interaction. Many people in my department study these types of effects, and certainly don’t think of them as placebo. So, where is the line between placebo and mind-body treatments? Is it just the way we label them?
As a really cool example of mind-body interaction, check out Mike Irwin’s study (press release) of immune response to the virus that causes shingles. In this study, older adults who did tai chi (meditation through movement), had higher levels of immune functioning and quality of life scores than people in a wait-list control group. Interestingly, the effects of the tai chi intervention were additive with the shingles vaccine, such that older adults who received both the tai chi intervention and the vaccine had cell-mediated immune levels comparable to those of younger adults (who are at much lower risk for getting shingles as a result).
Some other articles about pain and placebo:
Turner et al. (1994): The Importance of placebo effects in pain treatment and research.
Hrobjartsson & Gotzsche (2001): Is the placebo powerless? An analysis of clinical trials comparing placebo with no treatment.
Stewart-Williams (2004): The placebo puzzle: Putting together the pieces.
Some other articles about Mind-Body stuff:
Cruess, D. G., Antoni, M. H., McGregor, B. A., Kilbourn, K. M., Boyers, A.E., Alferi, S.M., Carver, C. S., & Kumar, M. (2000). Cognitive-behavioral stress management reduces serum cortisol by enhancing benefit finding about women being treated for early stage breast cancer. Psychosomatic Medicine, 62(3), 304-308. (4 pages)
Davidson, R.J., Kabat-Zinn, J., Schumacher, J. Rosenkranz, M., Muller, D., Santorelli, S.F., Urganowski, R., Harrington, A., Bonus, K. & Sheridan, J. F. (2003). Alterations in brain and immune function produced by mindfulness meditation. Psychosomatic Medicine, 65(4), 564-570. (6 pages)
Storch, M., Gaab, J., Kuttel, Y., Stussi, A, & Fend, H. (2007). Psychoneuroendocrine effects of resource-activating stress management training. Health Psychology, 26(4), 456-463. (7 pages)
I just got back from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology’s Annual Conference, this year in Albuquerque, NM. Some of the highlights in my book included talks on SCN and neuro-endocrine interactions:
Symposium on Social Cognitive Neuroscience Perspectives on Intragroup and Intergroup Relations. Of particular interest here, Jay Van Bavel discussed his work with Dominic Packer and Will Cunningham, using a minimal group paradigm (with mixed race teams). As in previous work, participants showed ingroup bias (they favored people on their own team over people on the other team). Using fMRI, the group found that viewing photos of ingroup members (compared to viewing photos of outgroup members) was associated with increased activity in regions of the brain that are associated with affective processing (amygdala, striatum). This is especially interesting considering the fact that the amygdala is usually thought of as a “fear” region. This work adds to the mounting evidence that the amygdala may be more broadly associated with motivationally relevant affective processes. The work is also interesting because it adds to the literature suggesting that there is something special about the idea of an ingroup, regardless of familiarity/ race.
Jenn Pfeifer also presented results (from an impressive longitudinal fMRI study of children and adolescents) demonstrating increased amygdala activity in imitating facial expressions of ingroup compared to outgroup members (in this case, ingroup = gender). Furthermore, across several areas of the brain that are typically associated with shared representations of the self and others, “children who were more biased in favor of their own gender showed greater activity in response to gender ingroup members, while in other preliminary data, girls with higher levels of estradiol [female sex hormone] showed greater activity in response to boys.” In fact, in young girls who did not consciously show interest in boys, levels of sex hormones were associated with the ways that they responded to photos of the opposite sex in the scanner. Hormones are powerful things…
Continuing on the topic of hormones, at a symposium on Social Endocrinology: How Hormones Can Contribute to Research in Social and Personality Psychology, Pranjal Mehta presented data suggesting the importance of considering the role of multiple hormone systems in concert. Pranjal’s data demonstrated an interaction between cortisol and testosterone levels in predicting a response to defeat in a competition. From Pranjal’s absract: “After facing social defeat, high testosterone- low cortisol individuals were more likely to choose to compete again than high testosterone, high cortisol individuals. Hormones were unrelated to the decision to compete again after victory. These data support the hypothesis that when social status is threatened, testosterone increases the motivation to gain status, whereas cortiso influences behavioral approach and avoidance.” Given how much we have come to rely on hormonal measures to link psychology and health outcomes, I was especially interested to see how important the interaction of multiple hormones was in predicting the “dominance behavior” outcomes discussed. This is potentially of interest to people interested in health as well, because dominance hierarchies seem to play such a key role in health outcomes.
Other talks at this symposium addressed the role of testosterone in decision making (e.g. testosterone made people more likely to maximize their gains in an ultimatum game, but placebo effects/ thinking you had received testosterone made people more likely to behave in aggressive ways). I am not sure what to make of the data since the manipulations typically involved administering testosterone exogenously, and who knows whether giving someone testosterone is the same thing as having the body produce it in response to outside influences. I actually thought one of the most interesting points here related to the placebo effects– despite the fact that actually receiving testosterone made people behave in one way, the belief that one had received testosterone made them behave in the opposite (aggressive) way that is typically depicted in the media. Does testosterone as an excuse make men think that they can behave in aggressive ways?
More updates on SPSP soon.