Category: Post

  • Anne Carson · Gloves on!

    `Anne Carson · Gloves on!

    Anne Carson · Poem: ‘In My Life as a Visiting Lecturer I Meet Various and Sundry People or,  Another Way to Think of This, Here Are All the Novels I Never Wrote and You Are Welcome to Them’

    Anne Carson · Beware the man whose handwriting sways like a reed in the wind

     Sent to Red Dog and Jonathan

    She’s got grace, in at least two senses of the word.

    I fashion myself not so much as a critic, a word which has become problematic to some, rather as a commentator. Certainly nothing as serious as creator, let alone influencer.

  • Deficiency of some sort in the right fusiform gyrus of the inferior …

    Deficiency of some sort

    I must have  a deficiency of some sort  in the right fusiform gyrus of the inferior medial temporal lobe of  my brain. People with damage to the front of that region are face-blind,

    Bilish comedy < melodrama

    Melancholy

    Cold War Steve (@coldwarsteve) on X

    Cold War Steve (@coldwarsteve) on X

    The Factors that Induce or Overcome Freezing of Gait in Parkinson’s Disease – Rahman – 2008 – Behavioural Neurology – Wiley Online Library

    The Factors that Induce or Overcome Freezing of Gait in Parkinson’s Disease

    Send to Dogs.

  • Freud, Jazz, PD, Prions

    Freud on ideas without proofs, plus the quote from Aristotle, Kandel’s rehabilitation of Freud 

    IDAGIO on Instagram: “‘Classical music is far from boring.’ We couldn’t agree more! Do you often meet people who claim that it is?”

    IDAGIO on Instagram: “‘Classical music is far from boring.’ We couldn’t agree more! Do you often meet people who claim that it is?”

    Jazz: 

    https://www.instagram.com/p/DHlQBKfOq2z/?img_index=3&igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==

    https://www.instagram.com/p/DHaoiUQMGsA/?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==

    https://www.instagram.com/stories/jazzphotoarchives/3595767111227087362?utm_source=ig_story_item_share&igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ== 

    Gen Z slang : https://www.instagram.com/reel/DHYfoSfK_W1/?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==

    “Anyone can become angry—that is easy,” [Aristotle] wrote in The Nicomachean Ethics. “But to be angry with the right person and to the right degree and at the right time and for the right purpose, and in the right way—that is not within everybody’s power and is not easy.”

    We cannot do without men with the courage to think new things before they can prove them. < Freud.

    “We must recollect that all of our provisional ideas in psychology will presumably one day be based on an organic substructure,”14 he wrote. In his book Beyond the Pleasure Principle, written in 1920, he continued: “The deficiencies in our description would probably vanish if we were already in a position to replace the psychological terms with physiological or chemical ones.… years of questions we have to put to it. They may be of a kind that will blow away the whole of our artificial structure of hypotheses.”

    < Freud

      https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0197018624000871#preview-section-abstract

    > Alpha-syn etc. Great article.

           

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proteinopathy

    < The site of the brain affected (neurodegeneration) in the PD is not only substantia nigra but also locus coeruleus which is a major norepinephrine nucleus. Noradrenaline induces α-syn oligomers formation which is responsible for neurodegeneration in locus coeruleus. α-syn oligomerization is dependent on oxidation of noradrenaline

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birefringence#Optical_devices

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-%CE%B1-synuclein_drug

     https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22743090/

    <  The gap between symptoms and pathology in Alzheimer’s disease has been explained by the hypothetical construct of “cognitive reserve”–a set of variables including education, intelligence, and mental stimulation which putatively allow the brain to adapt to-and hence mask–underlying pathologies by maintaining cognitive function despite underlying neural changes

         

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proteostasis

            

    Resources for PD https://www.perplexity.ai/search/fd7da171-50ab-40fa-8802-ef5ae0891f30

     https://www.comparitech.com/blog/vpn-privacy/vpn-dutch-tv-abroad/

  • Notes on Kandel, Age of Insight

    The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, from Vienna 1900 to the Present
    Kandel, Eric R.
    Citation (APA): Kandel, E. R. (2012). The Age of Insight: The Quest to Understand the Unconscious in Art, Mind, and Brain, from Vienna 1900 to the Present [Kindle iOS version]. Retrieved from Amazon.com

    Part One: A Psychoanalytic Psychology and Art of Unconscious Emotion
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    Van Swieten formed what is now known as the First Vienna School of Medicine, a school that began to transform Viennese medicine from the practice of therapeutic quackery based on humanist philosophy and the teachings of Hippocrates and Galen into a practice based on natural science.
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    This development had two roots. First, as noted, every patient who died in the Vienna General Hospital was autopsied under the supervision of a single, highly trained person, the head pathologist.
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    During a career spanning over thirty years, he and his associates carried out some sixty thousand autopsies,
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    The process gave rise to a new understanding of the clinical-pathological correlation that has characterized modern medicine ever since.
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    contrary to the teachings of Galen, clinical symptoms arise from disorders of individual organs: symptoms are the cries of suffering organs. To understand disease, one must first find where in the body the disease originates.
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    Skoda became not only a skilled listener to the heart’s sounds, but also a remarkable interpreter of their anatomical and pathological significance, setting the standard for current medical practice.
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    In fact several of the founders of academic medicine in the United States—William Osler, William Halsted, and Harvey Cushing—studied medicine in Vienna before assuming their leadership roles.
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    disease, Rokitansky and Skoda also provided the scientific basis for the concept of the disease process, the idea that each disease has a natural history and progresses through a series of steps from its onset to its termination.
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    “The phenomena are a visible expression of that which is hidden.”
    Highlight(blue) – Chapter 3. Viennese Artists, Writers, and Scientists Meet in the Zuckerkandl Salon > Page 58 · Location 663
    both fields appear repeatedly in the background ornamentation of Klimt’s paintings. In fact, his radical portrayals of the nude female figure are seen by the art historian Emily Braun as reflecting a naturalistic, post-Darwinian perspective: “After Darwin, the body in painting stands nakedly for itself: a biological species subject to the same procreative laws as every other organism.”
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    His linking of psychology and brain biology led him to a second idea that is central to the biology of mind: the brain—and particularly its outer covering, the cerebral cortex—does not function as a single organ; therefore, different mental functions can be localized to different regions.
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    Broca and Wernicke each conducted postmortem examinations of the brains of people with speech defects and found that specific disorders of language are associated with damage to specific regions of the brain. Thus, language can indeed be localized. The understanding of language is located
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    in the back of the cortex (in the left posterior superior temporal gyrus), the expression of language is located in the front of the cortex (in the left posterior frontal lobe), and the two sites are connected by a bundle of nerve fibers.
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    damage to the hypothalamus produces stress that can cause what we now call “stress ulcers” in the stomach. Subsequent work by other scientists showed that the hypothalamus controls the pituitary gland and the autonomic nervous system and therefore plays a central role in mediating sexual, aggressive, and defensive behavior and in controlling hunger, thirst, and other homeostatic functions.
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    Encouraged by Brücke to study the nervous system, Freud completed one study of the lamprey, a simple vertebrate animal, and another study of the crayfish, a simple invertebrate animal. He found that the cells of the invertebrate nervous system
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    are not fundamentally different from those of the vertebrate nervous system.
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    During this period, Freud made several contributions to research on the neuroanatomy of the medulla oblongata (the part of the nervous system that contains the centers for breathing and heart rhythms), and carried out several important clinical neurological studies on cerebral palsy and aphasias.
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    We cannot do without men with the courage to think new things before they can prove them.
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    He therefore concluded that his patients’ reports were based not on real events but were “only phantasies which my patients had made up or which I myself had perhaps forced on them.” 11 This led him to alter his seduction theory. He now saw the traumatic seduction experienced by the patient not as an actual physical act, but as an imagined physical experience with the patient’s parent, a fantasy that he concluded was universal.
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    Rather, he saw the decision as a necessary and, he hoped, temporary separation that would allow time for both the psychology of mind and the biology of the brain to mature before any ultimate unification of the two was attempted—a radical idea at that time.
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    “We must recollect that all of our provisional ideas in psychology will presumably one day be based on an organic substructure,” 14 he wrote. In his book Beyond the Pleasure Principle, written in 1920, he continued:
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    The deficiencies in our description would probably vanish if we were already in a position to replace the psychological terms with physiological or chemical ones.…
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    We may expect [physiology and chemistry] to give the most surprising information and we cannot guess what answers it will return in a few dozen
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    years of questions we have to put to it. They may be of a kind that will blow away the whole of our artificial structure of hypotheses.
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    His determination was based on the remarkable insight that unlike many neurological disorders, psychiatric disorders—and psychopathology in general—are extensions and distortions of normal mental processes.
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    cognitive psychology,
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    The term “cognition” refers to all processes by which a sensory stimulus is transformed, reduced, elaborated, stored, recovered and used. It is concerned with these processes even when they operate in the absence of relevant stimulation, as in images and hallucinations.… Given such sweeping definition it is apparent that cognition is involved in everything a human being might possibly do, that every psychological phenomenon is a cognitive phenomenon. 16
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    The subjective experience which appears in consciousness during sleep and which, after waking, is referred to by the sleeper as a dream is only the end result of unconscious mental activity during sleep which, by its nature or its intensity, threatens to interfere with sleep itself. Instead of waking, the sleeper dreams. We call the conscious experience during sleep, which the sleeper may or may not recall after waking, the manifest dream. Its various elements are referred to as the manifest dream content. The unconscious thoughts and wishes which threaten to waken the sleeper we call the latent dream content. The unconscious mental operations by which the latent dream content is transformed into the manifest dream we call the dream work. 8
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    Freud also continues an earlier line of thought—namely, that to understand a person’s present, one must turn inward and understand that person’s earliest experiences in childhood, both real and imagined.
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    First, mental processes operate primarily unconsciously; conscious thought and emotion are the exception rather than the rule.
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    Second, no aspect of mental activity is simply noise in the machinery of the brain. Mental events do not occur by chance, but adhere to scientific laws.
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    Third, and critical to unlocking the secrets of the human unconscious, Freud
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    argued that irrationality per se is not abnormal: it is the universal language of the
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    Fourth, normal and abnormal mental function lie on a continuum. Every neurotic symptom, no matter how strange it may seem to the patient, is not strange to the unconscious mind, because it is related to earlier mental processes.
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    What proved to be Freud’s most original and influential idea is that mental activity adheres to scientific laws.
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    The superego is the unconscious moral agency, the embodiment of our aspirations.
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    the implicit unconscious. The implicit unconscious, which we now realize is a much larger part of our unconscious mental life than Freud thought, is not concerned with instinctual drives or conflicts. Instead, it is concerned with habits and perceptual and motor skills, which involve procedural (implicit) memory. Even though it is not repressed, the implicit unconscious is never accessible to consciousness.
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    Freud used the term unconscious in a broader sense—the preconscious unconscious—
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    access to it by an effort of attention.
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    unconscious much of the time; it becomes conscious only as sensory percepts—words, images, and emotions.
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    consciousness is Darwinian: it allows us to experience thought, emotion, and the states of pleasure and pain that are essential for the propagation of the species.
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    book Darwin points out that emotions are part of a primitive, virtually universal approach-avoidance system designed to seek out pleasure and decrease exposure to pain.
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    The patients in his five major case studies—Dora, Little Hans, the Rat Man, Schreber, the Wolf Man—have become characters as indelible in the canon of modern literature as those of Dostoevsky.
    Bookmark – Chapter 8. The Depiction of Modern Women’s Sexuality in Art > Page 143 · Location 1661
    Bookmark – Chapter 9. The Depiction of the Psyche in Art > Page 193 · Location 2070
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    Die Träumenden Knaben
    Bookmark – Chapter 10. The Fusion of Eroticism, Aggression, and Anxiety in Art > Page 245 · Location 2562
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    Part Three: Biology of the Beholder’s Visual Response to Art
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    The ventral tegmental area of the midbrain also contains neurons that release dopamine, a chemical that serves to command attention and anticipate reward.
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    Computers are better than the human brain at processing and manipulating large amounts of data, but they lack the hypothesis-testing, creative, and inferential capabilities of our visual system.
    Part Five: An Evolving Dialogue Between Visual Art and Science
    Bookmark – Chapter 30. Brain Circuits for Creativity > Page 688 ·
  • The Disordered Mind: What Unusual Brains Tell Us About Ourselves

    Notebook Export
    The Disordered Mind: What Unusual Brains Tell Us About Ourselves
    Kandel, Eric R.
    Citation (Chicago Style): Kandel, Eric R.. The Disordered Mind: What Unusual Brains Tell Us About Ourselves. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2018. Kindle edition.

    1. What Brain Disorders Can Tell Us About Ourselves
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    The fourth principle, which derives from the first three, is that information flows in one direction only—from the dendrites to the cell body to the axon, then along the axon to the synapse. We now call this flow of information in the brain the principle of dynamic polarization.
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    immediately began to hear clicking noises, a fast rapping similar to Morse code. The clicking noise was an electrical signal, an action potential, the fundamental unit of neural communication. Adrian was listening in on the language of neurons. What produced the action
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    Descartes’s mind-body dualism has proved hard to shake because it reflects the way we experience ourselves.
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    Each gene encodes—that is, issues the instructions for making—a particular protein. Proteins determine the structure, function, and other biological characteristics of every cell in our body.
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    For example, Alzheimer’s disease, which primarily affects memory; Parkinson’s disease, which primarily affects movement; and Huntington’s disease, which affects movement, mood, and cognition, are all thought to involve faulty protein folding, as we shall see in later chapters. The three disorders produce strikingly different symptoms because the abnormal folding affects different proteins and different regions of the brain. We will undoubtedly discover common mechanisms in other diseases as well.
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    Because of neurology’s traditional emphasis on anatomy, we know a great deal more about the neural circuitry of neurological disorders than of psychiatric disorders. In addition, the underlying neural circuitry of psychiatric disorders is more complex than that of neurological disorders. Scientists have only recently begun to explore the brain regions involved in thought, planning, and motivation, the
    2. Our Intensely Social Nature: The Autism Spectrum
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    other people have a mind of their own, that they have their own beliefs, aspirations, desires, and intentions. This innate understanding is different from a shared emotion. A very young child will smile when you smile or frown when you frown. But realizing that the person you’re looking at may be thinking about something different from what you’re thinking about is a profound skill that arises only later in normal development, around the age of three or four.
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    Thus, one of the reasons people with autism have difficulty with social interactions is that they have limited capacity to read socially meaningful biological actions such as reaching to shake hands.
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    while a mutation in a single gene is responsible for some disorders, such as Huntington’s disease, single mutations do not cause most other brain disorders, including autism, depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia.
    5. Memory, the Storehouse of the Self: Dementia
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    Rather than relying on higher, cognitive regions such as the medial region of the temporal lobe, implicit memory depends more on regions of the brain that respond to stimuli, for example the amygdala, the cerebellum, and the basal ganglia, or, in the simplest instances, the reflex pathways themselves.
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    Short-term memory results from strengthening existing synaptic connections, making them function better, whereas long-term memory results from the growth of new synapses. Put another way, long-term memory leads to anatomical changes in the brain, whereas short-term memory does not. When synaptic connections weaken or disappear over time, memory fades or is lost.
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    benign senescent forgetfulness,
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    found that age-related memory loss involves the dentate gyrus, a structure within the hippocampus.
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    that bone is an endocrine organ and that it releases a hormone called osteocalcin. Karsenty found that osteocalcin acts on many organs of the body and also gets into the brain, where it promotes spatial memory and learning by influencing the production of serotonin, dopamine, GABA, and other neurotransmitters. 8
    6. Our Innate Creativity: Brain Disorders and Art
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    ability to recognize faces resides in the right fusiform gyrus of the inferior medial temporal lobe of the brain. People with damage to the front of that region are face-blind,
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    similar in nature, although more modest in scope, to the creative process of the artist. This creative process is known as the beholder’s share.
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    experience moments in their work in which they undergo, in a controlled manner, a relatively free communication between the unconscious and conscious parts of their mind. He calls this controlled access to our unconscious “regression in the service of the ego.”
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    Max Ernst, a leader first of Dada and later of Surrealist art, bought a copy of Prinzhorn’s book and took it to Paris, where it became the “Picture Bible” of the Surrealists.
    7. Movement: Parkinson’s and Huntington’s Diseases
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    organizational logic of the brain as a whole. In the broadest sense, the task of every circuit in the nervous system is to add up the total excitatory and inhibitory information it receives and determine
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    whether to pass that information along. Sherrington called this principle “the integrative action of the nervous system.”
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    the disease worsens, other areas of the brain besides the substantia nigra become involved.
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    Initially, L-dopa was viewed as a cure, but after a honeymoon of several years, it fell out of favor because it was only effective as long as there were dopamine-producing cells in the substantia nigra. It turned out that as more dopamine-producing cells died, the drug’s beneficial effects wore off abruptly, leaving patients with involuntary movements, called dyskinesias. Clearly, an alternative treatment was needed.
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    found that a particular area of the basal ganglia, the subthalamic nucleus, is also rich in dopamine-producing nerve cells and plays an essential role in the control of movement.
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    1990 he published the amazing result: damaging the subthalamic nucleus in one side of the brain of a monkey with Parkinson’s disease caused the tremor and muscular rigidity on the other side of the body to vanish. 9
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    As we have seen, the death of dopamine-producing neurons, caused by misfolded proteins, leads to Parkinson’s disease.
    8. The Interplay of Conscious and Unconscious Emotion: Anxiety, Post-Traumatic Stress, and Faulty Decision Making
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    restrict the word “emotion” to the observable, unconscious behavioral component and use “feeling” to refer to the subjective experience of emotion.
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    Many structures in the brain are involved in emotion, but four of them are particularly important: the hypothalamus, which is the executor of emotion; the amygdala, which orchestrates emotion; the striatum, which comes into play when
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    we form habits, including addictions; and the prefrontal cortex, which evaluates whether a particular emotional response is appropriate to the situation at hand (fig. 8.4). The prefrontal cortex interacts with, and in part controls, the amygdala and striatum.
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    “Anyone can become angry—that is easy,” he wrote in The Nicomachean Ethics. “But to be angry with the right person and to the right degree and at the right time and for the right purpose, and in the right way—that is not within everybody’s power and is not easy.”
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    “Anyone can become angry—that is easy,” he wrote in The Nicomachean Ethics. “But to be angry with the right person and to the right degree and at the right time and for
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    ventromedial prefrontal cortex. This structure is also important for what we would call moral emotions—indignation, compassion, embarrassment, and shame.
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    dorsal prefrontal cortex, is actually the point at which our conscious mind—our volition, or will—can impose itself on the way emotion is being carried out.
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    epigenetic changes, that is, molecular changes in reaction to the environment that do not alter the DNA of a gene but do affect the expression of that gene.
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    People in the treatment group were given propranolol, a drug that blocks the action of
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    noradrenaline, a neurotransmitter released in response to stress that triggers our fight, flight, or freeze response.
    9. The Pleasure Principle and Freedom of Choice: Addictions
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    Swedish pharmacologist Arvid Carlsson, dopamine is released primarily by neurons in two regions of the brain: the ventral tegmental area and the substantia nigra (fig.
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    communications network, known as the mesolimbic pathway, is the major network in the brain’s reward system. It puts dopamine-producing neurons in a position to broadcast information widely, including to regions throughout the cerebral cortex.
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    Activation of dopamine signaling, along with activation of several other important reward signals that vary from drug to drug, is responsible for the initial high that people experience on drugs.
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    Adaptive habits are promoted by the release of dopamine into the prefrontal cortex and the striatum, the areas of the
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    brain involved with control and with reward and motivation.
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    brain imaging reveals that cocaine, a highly addictive drug, interferes with the removal of dopamine from the synapse. As a result, dopamine lingers there and continues to produce pleasurable feelings that persist beyond those produced by ordinary physiological stimuli. In this way cocaine hijacks the brain’s reward system.
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    series of imaging
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    involves Vietnam veterans who had become hooked on very high quality heroin while overseas. Amazingly, most of them were able to conquer their addiction when they returned to the United States because none of the cues that had encouraged them to use heroin in Vietnam were present at home. 4
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    to nicotine modifies their dopamine-receiving neurons in such a way that they respond more powerfully to cocaine. In contrast, giving the animals cocaine first has no effect on their subsequent response to nicotine. 13 Thus, nicotine primes the brain for cocaine addiction.
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    obesity seemed to spread through a social network like a virus. In fact, if one person became obese, the likelihood that a friend would follow suit increased by 171 percent.
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    As we have seen, drug addiction is a form of long-term memory. The brain becomes conditioned to associate certain environmental cues with pleasure, and encountering those cues can trigger an urge to use the drug.
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    Unfortunately, pharmaceutical companies have devoted very little effort to developing drugs to treat addiction. One reason is their perception that they cannot recover their research costs from addicted people.
    10. Sexual Differentiation of the Brain and Gender Identity
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    Gender identity is not the same thing as sexual orientation, a person’s romantic attraction to the opposite sex, the same sex, or both sexes. At present, we know too little about the biology of sexual orientation to discuss it here.
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    Does our brain contain neural circuits for both male and female behavior, like the mouse brain, or does it have separate neural circuits for men and for women?
    11. Consciousness: The Great Remaining Mystery of the Brain
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    About 20 percent of the neurons located on the border between the two populations can be active during either mating or aggression.
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    brain contains a system—which they
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    called the reticular activating system—that extends from the brain stem and midbrain to the thalamus, and from the thalamus to the cortex.
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    In theory, we should be able to determine whether neural correlates cause consciousness by the usual methods: see if consciousness can be turned on by turning on the neural correlates of consciousness, and see if consciousness can be turned off by turning off the neural correlates of consciousness. We’re not quite able to do that yet.
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    they discovered the anterior insular cortex, or insula, a little island in the cortex located between the parietal and temporal lobes. The insula is where our feelings are represented—
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