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Neuron Culture

David Dobbs on science, nature, and culture.

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dobbspic I write on science, medicine, nature, culture and other matters for the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, Slate, National Geographic, Scientific American Mind, and other publications. (Find clips here.) Right now I'm writing my fourth book, The Orchid and the Dandelion, which explores the hypothesis that the genetic roots some of our worst problems and traits — depresison, hyperaggression, violence, antisocial behavior — can also give rise to resilience, cooperation, empathy, and contentment. The book expands on my December 2009 Atlantic article exploring these ideas. I've also written three books, including Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral, which traces the strangest but most forgotten controversy in Darwin's career — an elemental dispute running some 75 years.

If you'd like, you can subscribe to Neuron Culture by email. You might also want to see more of my work at my main website or check out my Tumblr log.



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« The mojo of open journalism, plus that itchy beta thing | Main | Eureka! Neuron Culture goes Sally Field »

Top 5 Neuron Culture hits from January - plus Neil Young

Posted on: February 1, 2010 5:23 PM, by David Dobbs

PTSD, pharma, adjuvants, bad movies -- these are a few of my favorite things, and readers' too.

What's Neil doing here? He wasn't on Neuron Culture; I posted his clip on my catch-all, David Dobbs's Somatic Marker, because I love him. So he comes first. From 1986. Looks as if he's having a particularly good time here.



Neuron Culture's Top Five from Jan 2010

NEJM study finds post-event morphine cuts combat PTSD rates in half

"This is a pretty big deal if it holds up in future trials. One caveat I've not had time to check out is whether the morphine was often applied as part of an more robust medical response in general, which itself might reduce later PTSD symptoms. I hope the DOD soon follows up with another, larger study, for as Ben Carey notes, the has some substantial implications if indeed it holds up."

Avatar smackdown!

I talk movie smack down to my buddy Jonah Lehrer. He hasn't spoken to me since. I think he's just busy selling way more books than I am.

The Weird History of Vaccine Adjuvants

This originally ran in October 2009 and topped the charts then. It got a boost this month when the editors of the sciblog anthology OpenLab 2009 selected it as one of the 50 winning entries.
Danny Carlat on the big new antidepressants-don't-work study
Shortest post ever to make the top hits list. Carlat offers some caveats on the big JAMA study. I tossed up an excerpt and a link hoping I'd find time to lodge my own take soon. Still waiting for that time -- though I did make a little time to comment on the next take on that study, which was

Why do antidepressants work only for the deeply depressed? A neuroskeptical look.

In which Neuroskeptic carves a delicious historical arc.

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Since the dawn of civilization the good thinking and all that is good are culture. It is complete picture of life. It represents what we do in our daily life. Language ,music,ideas about what is bad and good,ways of working and playing, and the tools and other objects made and used by people in the society-all these are part of a society’s culture.
Cultures vary from society to society or country to country.

Posted by: Chiropractic Marketing | February 3, 2010 8:01 AM

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