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Our NeuroSociety? Neurological Narratives and Social Neuroscience.

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Presentation on theme: "Our NeuroSociety? Neurological Narratives and Social Neuroscience."— Presentation transcript:

1 Our NeuroSociety? Neurological Narratives and Social Neuroscience

2 Our NeuroSociety? New Imaging Technologies Possibilities of Cortical Plasticity Medicalizing of behavior Diagnostic Bracket Creep Cosmetic Psychopharmacology/Neurology Neurological Narratives Social Neuroscience

3 CT SCANNER

4 from Dumit, 2004

5 CT scan PET Scan MRI Scan (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) From Dumit, 2004

6 PET (Positron Emission Tomography) Procedure Johns Hopkins U. Medical Center, 1995

7 Nancy Andreasen (1984) Constance Perchura and Joseph Martin (1991)

8 Jeffrey Schwartz, Brain Lock (1997)

9 Newsweek (1990) Time (1992) Class of SSRI: selective serotonin- reuptake-inhibitor

10 1993 and with a new afterword,1997 PETER KRAMER “cosmetic psychopharmacology” “diagnostic bracket creep”

11 " Kids are different today," I hear every mother say, "Mother needs something today to calm her down." And 'though she's not really ill, there's a little yellow pill She goes running for the shelter of her mother's little helper. And it helps her on her way, gets her through her busy day. -- "Mother's Little Helper," The Rolling Stones, 1966

12 Spectrum of Bi-Polar Disorder NEW YORK TIMES, MARCH 22, 2005

13 JOHN GARTNER 2005 PETER WHYBROW 2005

14 NEW MUSICAL ON BROADWAY about bi-polar mother

15 Alexander Romanovich Luria (1902-1977)

16 1985

17 Temple Grandin (1947- Her Squeeze Machine & her Books

18 Neurological Narratives and Neurological Novels

19 Vittorio Gallese Giacomo Rizzolatti Premotor cortex and the recognition of motor actions Giacomo Rizzolatti, Luciano Fadiga, Vittorio Gallese and Leonardo Fogassi Istituto di Fisiologia Umana, Università di Parma, Parma, Italy Cognitive Brain Research Volume 3, Issue 2, March 1996, Pages 131-141

20 Iacoboni and Dapretto Redgrave Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7, 942–951 (December 2006)

21 Mirror Neurons First described in inferior frontal cortex in monkey Fire not only when the monkey is moving his hand or its mouth, but also when he sees someone else performing the same action. These neurons ‘mirror’ the behavior of the other animal/human, as though the observer were performing the action. Important for understanding the actions of other people, learning new skills by imitation. Some argue they are the basis for understanding emotions, and may be the neuronal substrate of empathy. Function according to a “Perception-Action Theory.” With thanks to Nouchine Hadjikhani MartinosSCAN 2007

22 Mirror Neurons - localization STS - superior temporal sulcus IPL - inferior parietal lobule IFC - inferior frontal cortex Nouchine Hadjikhani MartinosSCAN 2007

23 Implications of Mirror Neuron System Findings Neural mechanism for the notion of culture & social interaction: We imitate, and simulate others through our neural activity; our social responses are ‘hard-wired’ or built into the very structure of the brain. Automatic, direct process: our responses to others are not made through inferences, or through analogy, but immediate simulation.

24 First Issue of new Journal, Social Neuroscience, March 2006 Textbooks like this one began appearing in 2004 & 2005

25 “A “metaphorical body” helped build Barack Obama’s triumph so far, in George Lakoff’s scientific reading. That tall, supple, smiling Obama figure, standing tall, fires up good feelings through the “mirror neurons” in our brains. “Up and forward” is the effect we feel, as Lakoff puts it in conversation. July 11, 2008 Open Source, radio progam

26 “In this new account of personhood, psychiatry no longer distinguishes between organic and functional disorders. It no longer concerns itself with the mind or the psyche. Mind is simply what the brain, does. And mental pathology is simply the behavioral consequence of an identifiable, and potentially correctable, error or anomaly in some of those elements now identified as aspects of that organic brain. This is a shift in human ontology—in the kinds of persons we take ourselves to be.” (Rose, Neurochemical Selves, p. 193).


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