Showing posts with label research on the brain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label research on the brain. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Brain differences account for some of the reasons for being an extrovert

[caption id="attachment_10741" align="alignleft" width="428"]Bill Gates Bill Gates--an introvert[/caption]

Why are some people more extroverted than others?  Scientists report findings that indicate extroverts have more sensitive brain-reward systems.  This has to do with a greater dopamine response system in the brains of those who are particularly outgoing.

Scientists maintain people have different ways of responding to rewards, with some people's brains releasing more of the neurotransmitter dopamine.  This allows these individuals to be more involved, excited and engaged in what's going on around them.

A study published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, June 2013, outlines the study.  Authors of the study tell us:

“Rewards like food, sex and social interactions as well as more abstract goals such as money or getting a degree trigger the release of dopamine in the brain, producing positive emotions and feelings of desire that motivate us to work toward obtaining those goals. In extroverts, this dopamine response to rewards is more robust so they experience more frequent activation of strong positive emotions,” Depue says.

“Dopamine also facilitates memory for circumstances that are associated with the reward. Our findings suggest this plays a significant role in sustaining extroverted behavior,” Depue adds. “The extroverts in our study showed greater association of context with reward than introverts, which means that over time, extroverts will acquire a more extensive network of reward-context memories that activate their brain’s reward system.”

How is that an advantage in terms of behavior in society?  Susan Cain, author of Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking tells us that society is biased toward extroverts.  Much of that is based upon human history and culture, that people who speak well and engage well with others are favored as being more likable and capable.  In fact it is also thought that introverts feel badly about what they interpret as their shyness.


But while some folks might bemoan the fact they are extroverts, psychologists tell us there are advantages in being an introvert.  One source maintains that the introvert has a "greater appreciation of subtlety and understatment" which can be a great strength, as the individual may take longer to answer questions and determining the appropriate response.  Furthermore, the introvert's self-sufficiency can be an advantage, as the individual might not respond according to what's popular or how he or she are rated by others but by some interior compass instead.


 The present study that reflects on how the brain assists in pre-determining behavior, researchers tell us, “At a broader level, the study begins to illuminate how individual differences in brain functioning interact with environmental influences to create behavioral variation. This knowledge may someday help us to understand how such interactions create more extreme forms of emotional behavior, such as personality disorders."





Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Deep brain stimulation found to reduce high blood pressure

[caption id="attachment_4309" align="alignleft" width="256" caption="Cerebral lobes of the brain"][/caption]

“This is an exciting finding, " one of the researchers pronounced about finding new treatment for controlling hard-to-control high blood pressure.  The report has been published in the January 25, 2011, print
issue of Neurology®, the journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

A 55-year-old man received deep brain stimulation in order to treat his central pain syndrome.  It was later found that the stimulation decreased his high blood pressure.  That high blood pressure had been so difficult to control, he had been taking four drugs for it, and still it was not within normal ranges.  He didn't get permanent relief from pain, but he did get relief from the high blood pressure.

Nikunj K. Patel, BSc, MBBS, MD, FRCS of Frenchay Hospital in Bristol, UK, wrote the case study and exclaimed,“This is an exciting finding as high blood
pressure affects millions of people and can lead to heart attack and
stroke, but for about one in 10 people, high blood pressure can’t be
controlled with medication or they cannot tolerate the medication."

But the deep brain stimulation still needs further evaluation, according to those involved in this study.

“More research is needed to confirm these results in
larger numbers of people, but this suggests that stimulation can produce
a large, sustained lowering of blood pressure,” Patel said. “With so
many people not responding to blood pressure medications, we are in need
of alternative strategies such as this one.”

Regulating high blood pressure is important.  That's because of the risks associated with it that include, according to heart specialists, the following:

Friday, November 5, 2010

Beets found good for the brain

PRN - GHN News Editor - A new study shows beets are good for the brain and that a daily dose increases blood flow, helping to prevent dementia.

Wake

University researchers at the Translational Science Center, undertook a
study to examine the benefits of beet juice.  They found its richness
in nitrate helps to open the blood vessels and improve blood flow to the
brain.

"One
of the great things about nitrite is that it seems to head straight for
the places that need more oxygen supplied by increased blood flow,"
said Gary Miller, associate professor in Wake Forest University's
Department of Health and Exercise Science and one of the senior
investigators on the project. "I think these results are consistent and
encouraging - that good diet consisting of a lot of fruits and
vegetables can contribute to overall good health."

This study supports previous research that reveals how nitrate-rich foods can lower blood pressure and improve exercise.

"There
are areas in the brain that become poorly perfused as you age, and
that's believed to be associated with dementia and poor cognition," said
Daniel Kim-Shapiro, director of Wake Forest University's Translational Science Center; Fostering Independence in Aging.

High
concentrations of nitrates are found in beets, as well as in celery,
cabbage and other leafy green vegetables like spinach and some lettuce.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Science reveals passionate love in the brain no different in Asians than Westerners


Cultural differences might not reflect biology, as
researchers have found that romantic love is really in the brain and folks from
Asia are just as passionate early on as Westerners, they just don't show it the
same.


A new study published in Human Brain Mapping (online publication date: 16
April 2010) set out to clarify this issue using a non self-report method:
neuroimagining via functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). was done by
Xiaomeng Xu, Doctoral Candidate in Psychology and Arthur Aron, Professor of
Psychology, both at Stony Brook University, with Lucy Brown at Albert Einstein
College of Medicine, Guikang Cao and Tingyong Feng of Southwest University,
China and Xuchu Weng of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, China, conducted the study.


In the study researchers examined brain patterns of 18 Chinese college students who had justfallen madly in love and were in the early stages of a romantic relationship.

The students were given an experiment where they looked at pictures of the
romantic partner vs an acquaintance.  The results of the study were compared toa previous one done with American Stony Brook University students to lookk atcultural differences in relationshiop to brain activations for early-stage
passionate love.


This study found that the patterns of brain response were extremely similar for Chinese and Americans. For people intenselyin love in both cultures, viewing images of the beloved elicited brain
activation in much the same way.


Love, and how it feels, is the same early on for
folks, this research explains, but experience, time and culture impacts how it
is portrayed.