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Studying biology at high school in the the 1970s I became aware of the "Piltdown Man Hoax". en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piltdown_Man
Piltdown Man was "discovered" in England by Charles Dawson in 1912, and although questions were asked over the ensuing decades, it was not until 1953 (long after Dawson's death) that it was shown to be an academic fraud. Well, perhaps "fraud" is too strong a word. Maybe it was an insiders' joke that got out of hand. One thing led to another and soon this fossilised skull appeared in the textbooks.
Needless to say, such a scientific hoax would be impossible to fabricate today. DNA testing has put a stop to that once and for all. Mind you, that's not to say some prominent theories of science today (Global Warming for instance), might not be scrutinised more closely in the future. I hope we can retain enough of our sense of skepticism (THE scientific method par excellence) to make such questions possible in the face of cancel culture.
Well let me tell you straight out. This image is a fake. It's not an "ancient alien", and although he goes by the name of "Phrenology Man", this pseudo science was itself shown to be fake by the end of the 19th century. The one thing I will say about Phrenology is that it got the "mechanics" completely wrong and the Phrenology bust model was complete fiction, but the general idea when applied to the brain (not the shape of the skull) is now regarded as likely. In other words, neurologists have shown through CT scans and the likes, that certain sections of the human brain do in fact control aspects of the mind and body.
Just a quick word on this and then I'll leave you in peace. We've all heard of the ideas about Right Brain and Left Brain. The simplistic notion that the right hemisphere controls the "feeling and creative" aspects and, the left hemisphere our "rational and linguistic" aspects. Now the major problem here is that it is far too simplistic. In fact, it is better to say that whilst certain sections of the brain do specialise in particular functions, it is the neural networks linking all these sections that do the real work of the mind.
Perhaps the preeminent expert in this field is the British psychiatrist, Professor Iain McGilchrist. In the same year that Jung's Red Book was first published, McGilchrist's masterwork appeared, "The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World" (2009). Here is a brief synopsis of his work: www.youtube.com/watch?v=81Ci-9y_EYo
For a fuller discussion of the implications of his work (although there is no substitute to reading the incredible book): "Matter is a Relative Matter With Iain McGilchrist" www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kAlwrnpHIs
The brain is truly an extraordinary organ. More than that, it is the pinnacle of the creative process. The problem with Phrenology Man is that he is really a simpleton.
Graphic shows two ways that dopamine acts at a synapse between a nerve cell and mushroom body neuron to influence memory. In one process, dopamine helps to form a new memory (associated an odor with an electric shock). In the other, dopamine works through a different receptor to slowly erode that memory.
Fruit flies remember to fear an odor if its presence is accompanied by an electric shock. That memory forms because the shock stimulates the release of the molecule dopamine from nerve cells linked to mushroom body neurons at the same time that the odor triggers a cellular signal (via calcium). When stimulated by dopamine, a “molecular antenna” or receptor molecule (dDA1) on the mushroom body neuron initiates chemical reactions (via the cAMP signaling molecule) that restructure the mushroom body neuron, strengthening the memory. Recall fades over time as, in the absence of the odor, lower levels of dopamine stimulate another dopamine receptor molecule (DAMB), leading to a weakening of the memory.
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Read more in Knowable Magazine
Why forgetting may make your mind more efficient
Evidence builds for ways that the brain actively erases memories
knowablemagazine.org/article/mind/2019/why-we-forget
Memory, the mystery
PODCAST: Just in the past half-century, our understanding of how exactly our brains remember has taken huge leaps. Amazingly, this is just the beginning. (Season 1/ Episode 4)
knowablemagazine.org/article/mind/2021/memory-mystery
Take a deeper dive: Selected scholarly reviews
Memory Allocation: Mechanisms and Function, Annual Review of Neuroscience
Understanding how neurons are selected to store memory traces, or engrams, in the brain may provide insight into how the brain manages information and what goes wrong in certain mental disorders.
www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev-neuro-080317-06...
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Knowable Magazine from Annual Reviews is a digital publication that seeks to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. Through compelling articles, beautiful graphics, engaging videos and more, Knowable Magazine explores the real-world impact of research through a journalistic lens. All content is rooted in deep reporting and undergoes a thorough fact-checking before publication.
The Knowable Magazine Science Graphics Library is an initiative to create freely available, accurate and engaging graphics for teachers and students. All graphics are curated from Knowable Magazine articles and are free for classroom use.
Knowable Magazine is an editorially independent initiative produced by Annual Reviews, a nonprofit publisher dedicated to synthesizing and integrating knowledge for the progress of science and the benefit of society.
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This graphic is available for free for in-classroom use. Contact us to arrange permission for any other use: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
Graphic recording of Stephanie West Allen's talk on Total Brain Medication at the NW Dispute Resolution Conf - May 2012
Graphic of side view of the human brain; a line depicts the flow of information between the cerebellum and the cerebral cortex.
While the cerebral cortex’s role in cognition has long been recognized, the cerebellum’s role has largely been ignored. But these two parts of the brain share an elaborate network of connections. Some 40 million neurons in the cerebral cortex have fiber-like axons extending to the pontine nuclei in the brainstem, an area intimately connected to the cerebellum. Extensive connections go in the other direction, too, from the cerebellum up to the cortex.
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The mysterious, multifaceted cerebellum
Once thought to merely coordinate movement, this region of the brain is proving to exert greater influence on cognition, emotion and other functions
knowablemagazine.org/article/mind/2020/what-does-the-cere...
Take a deeper dive: Selected scholarly reviews
The Theory and Neuroscience of Cerebellar Cognition, Annual Review of Neuroscience
Converging evidence from clinical observations and experiments in humans and animals suggests that the cerebellum coordinates mental functions in the same way it coordinates movement.
www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev-neuro-070918-05...
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Knowable Magazine from Annual Reviews is a digital publication that seeks to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. Through compelling articles, beautiful graphics, engaging videos and more, Knowable Magazine explores the real-world impact of research through a journalistic lens. All content is rooted in deep reporting and undergoes a thorough fact-checking before publication.
The Knowable Magazine Science Graphics Library is an initiative to create freely available, accurate and engaging graphics for teachers and students. All graphics are curated from Knowable Magazine articles and are free for classroom use.
Knowable Magazine is an editorially independent initiative produced by Annual Reviews, a nonprofit publisher dedicated to synthesizing and integrating knowledge for the progress of science and the benefit of society.
==
We love to hear how teachers are using our graphics. Contact us: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
This graphic is available for free for in-classroom use. Contact us to arrange permission for any other use: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
This book on trauma picks up where Peter Levine left off with his work. Fueled by his own interest in trauma from his family having lived in Holland during WWII and his father having been sent to a camp for political activism this is a book that is both a personal search for the author and a history of his involvement as a doctor in research on trauma.
He first worked at a veterans clinic in the late '70s so had opportunity to conduct a study to find out what pushed soldiers over the brink to aspects of madness. PTSD was not at the time a diagnosis the Veterans Administration thought was relevant. The author devotes a good portion of the book to relating the history of PTSD treatment to shed light on the lack of progress. During WWI soldiers who reported having psychological issues were said to be suffering from shell shock and treated for it with compassion. By the time WWII rolled around the war went on for so long that the armed forces could not afford to lose any able bodied soldiers to shell shock and orders were issued on both sides of the battle lines to forbid using such a psychological diagnosis. Those in power did not want to acknowledge that sending an entire generation of young men to fight for their country would adversely impact them for life. This explained a lot about the political resistance to giving a socio-political context to psychiatric diagnosis. It made all human suffering a personal problem rather than a sociological problem. This has long been one of my complaints about how therapy is practiced. The author descriptions of various medical protocol showed how doctors in their intakes of patients only addressed treatment of symptoms rather than taking into consideration the impact of trauma.
He also includes the research on how pharmacology was discovered to help (except in the case of veterans) and how pharmacology took over when other methods i.e. neuro-feedback were being discovered to be extremely effective with lasting results long after the treatment was administered unlike drugs which had to be taken for life. Abused and neglected children are four times more likely to be given antipsychotic drugs to control behavior.
New technology in brain imaging allowed researchers to see what was going on in the brain when people relived their trauma by listening to a script describing what happened to them. It was discovered that the speech making part of the brain was deactivated so did not allow the brain to describe what had happened. Studies of how people told the story of their traumatic event also revealed that memory of trauma is different from normal memory. It is not organized in a linear logical fashion and comes with visceral emotional cues. This led to the back lash of "false memory syndrome" once again attempting to take away the accounts of victims of abuse. Traumatic events also alter victims' perceptions of normal things and the brains capacity to think beyond the past. They were stuck in time. Veterans who took a Rorschach test saw mutilated body parts in every card.
The struggle of effectively treating trauma still suffers to this day an unwillingness by those in power to acknowledge trauma as a diagnosis. PTSD did make it into the DSM after Vietnam and could be applied to other terrifying events experienced by adults. But there was the trauma of childhood abuse, neglect and sexual molestation that an affected person did not express as an event and was often reluctant to mention. The author and others came up with a diagnosis they called Developmental Trauma Disorder and presented for inclusion in the DSM-V. It was not accepted because it was not believed to be widespread so not considered necessary for a separate diagnosis even though investigations by their group (The National Child Trauma Network) had shown that a million children were affected. So such children continue to be diagnosed according to how they express their anxiety when triggered thus Oppositional Defiant Disorder and ADHD as if it were a genetic aberration of the brain or a character flaw rather than the result of an extremely dysfunctional family impacted by damaging circumstances.
The impact of trauma is that people continue to live in the reality of the trauma and are unable to process through it because the trauma has changed the way the brain is wired and functions. Their brain is stuck on 'on' or they get hijacked by an environmental trigger and are again reliving the visceral and emotional terror of the trauma. This can lead to inappropriate even illegal and violent behavior leaving a wake of shame and guilt for the patient.
Finally in the last part of the book he looks at treatment that is effective. I was encouraged that these treatments did not involve pharmaceuticals. Yoga for instance helped victims of sexual assault reclaim their body (a modified yoga devoid of pelvic moves). Neurofeedback had remarkable results in rewiring the brain back to normal. EMDR is a technique that keeps the body occupied in the present while allowing the brain to release the emotions of the trauma. One technique involves rapid eye movement as the patient is asked to track the doctors finger back and forth while articulating what he sees or feels through sensory memory. Theatre worked particularly well for teens to embody their stories for an audience. Greek tragedies he notes were written in the wake of war based on the experience of soldiers which helped their healing on a community level. A psychological narrative technique called IFS organizes the different responses of the self into a dialogue with the self that has resilient characteristics. Breathing exercises, mindfulness practice, a family support network and community are also key. And my favorite—writing to yourself, breaking the silence of your shame through storytelling and finding others who can listen to your story.
All of these treatments speak to the ability of the human spirit to survive trauma and use the skills they learned to further their lives as useful members of their community. Looking through the lens of trauma is so much about story that I am fascinated by the journey of those who find their way back to health. The research has also allowed much insight into the workings of the brain. It is not so much about brain chemistry in the abstract sense that phrase implies, but about learned responses and coping skills that don't quite fit in normal life. The brain becomes an emotionally intelligent physiological being rather than a random, genetically determined entity.
An Ode To Your Brain
I came across this video on You Tube and have to share it with you. It's called "Ode to the Brain" and I think it is wonderful.
A simple 3 minute and 42 second introduction to Neurology set to music and beautiful images.
your brain stores masses of information. The human brain is a mass of jelly you can hold in your hand and yet it can contemplate the vastness of interstellar space.
The brain encodes what we know in cells called Neurons and there is something like 100 Trillion neural connections
Your brain contains the equivalent of 20 million volumes of information and has been described as a very big place inside a very small space.
Information flows in as energy and explodes into a sensory experience.
No longer at the mercy of the reptile brain we can change ourselves. Think of the possibilities
mp3: symphonyofscience.com "Ode to the Brain" is the ninth episode in the Symphony of Science music video series. Through the powerful words of scientists Carl Sagan, Robert Winston, Vilayanur Ramachandran, Jill Bolte Taylor, Bill Nye, and Oliver Sacks, it covers different aspects the brain including its evolution, neuron networks, folding, and more. The material sampled for this video comes from Carl Sagan's Cosmos, Jill Bolte Taylor's TED Talk, Vilayanur Ramachandran's TED Talk, Bill Nye's Brain episode, BBC's "The Human Body", Oliver Sachs' TED Talk, Discovery Channel's "Human Body: Pushing the Limits", and more.
“Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it”
... Albert Einstein
For "Our Daily Challenge ... education/wisdom"
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
Graphic describing predictive processing.
Neuroscientists often think of the brain as organized into hierarchical levels. The concept of predictive processing holds that each level makes predictions about the activity of the level below. These predictions flow down the hierarchy, and lower levels generate an error signal that indicates the difference between the predicted and actual sensory inputs. These error signals flow upward, and higher levels use them to refine their predictions. Predictions at the highest level help to create perceptions.
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Read more in Knowable Magazine
Psychedelics open a new window on the mechanisms of perception
Some neuroscientists think psychedelic drugs and the hallucinations they induce could help reveal how the brain generates our perceptions of the world around us — and of ourselves
knowablemagazine.org/article/mind/2021/psychedelics-open-...
Take a deeper dive: Selected scholarly reviews
Predictive Processing, Source Monitoring, and Psychosis, Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
Predictive processing — the idea that perceptions are the brain’s best hypotheses for the causes of sensory inputs — provides a framework to explain hallucinations and bizarre beliefs that are the hallmark of psychosis in conditions such as schizophrenia.
www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-032816-...
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Knowable Magazine from Annual Reviews is a digital publication that seeks to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. Through compelling articles, beautiful graphics, engaging videos and more, Knowable Magazine explores the real-world impact of research through a journalistic lens. All content is rooted in deep reporting and undergoes a thorough fact-checking before publication.
The Knowable Magazine Science Graphics Library is an initiative to create freely available, accurate and engaging graphics for teachers and students. All graphics are curated from Knowable Magazine articles and are free for classroom use.
Knowable Magazine is an editorially independent initiative produced by Annual Reviews, a nonprofit publisher dedicated to synthesizing and integrating knowledge for the progress of science and the benefit of society.
==
We love to hear how teachers are using our graphics. Contact us: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
This graphic is available for free for in-classroom use. Contact us to arrange permission for any other use: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
Location: Iowa Avenue at Gilbert Street, Iowa City - January 3, 2017
Partial demolition of Seashore Hall will make way for the new 58,400 square foot $33.5 million building, which will extend into a former parking lot. The 3-story brick structure will be demolished first. After the new building is completed in the summer of 2019 the remainder of Seashore Hall will be demolished.
Location: Iowa Avenue at Gilbert Street, Iowa City - January 3, 2017
Partial demolition of Seashore Hall will make way for the new 58,400 square foot $33.5 million building, which will extend into a former parking lot. The 3-story brick structure will be demolished first. After the new building is completed in the summer of 2019 the remainder of Seashore Hall will be demolished.
Personal Performance Trainer Michael Gonzalez-Wallace presents his SUPER BODY, SUPER BRAIN Fitness Program in an upcoming book on December 28th, 2010! The New Era of Strength Training is here. Use your brain to get a leaner body and a sharper brain.
Thanks for reading,
Michael Gonzalez-Wallace
Author of Upcoming Book: “SUPER BODY, SUPER BRAIN”, Release Date: December 2010
WEBSITE:
BLOG:
My LinkedIn
FOLLOW ME @TWITTER
JOIN MY FAN GROUP@FACEBOOK
Email me@michaelgonzalezwallace@gmail.com
Graphic shows the various ways that the brain forgets.
When memories are acquired (upper left), traces of the memory are stored by molecular changes in networks of cells, forming an engram. Memories stored in engrams can be forgotten “passively” by different processes (lower left), such as loss of contextual cues permitting retrieval of the memory, interference with retrieval by other similar memories, or simply the decay of unstable biological materials in the engram cells. Some researchers believe “active” forgetting may be more potent at erasing memory than the passive mechanisms. Several forms of active forgetting have been proposed, including intentional attempts to suppress unpleasant memories (motivated forgetting); forgetting of some parts of a memory by retrieval of other parts; decay of memory induced by interference from other information processing; and “intrinsic” forgetting — erasure of information by cells and biochemical processes as an essential part of the brain’s memory apparatus for managing information efficiently.
==
This graphic is available for free for in-classroom use. Please contact us to request permission for any other uses.
===
Read more in Knowable Magazine
Why forgetting may make your mind more efficient
Evidence builds for ways that the brain actively erases memories
knowablemagazine.org/article/mind/2019/why-we-forget
Memory, the mystery
PODCAST: Just in the past half-century, our understanding of how exactly our brains remember has taken huge leaps. Amazingly, this is just the beginning. (Season 1/ Episode 4)
knowablemagazine.org/article/mind/2021/memory-mystery
Take a deeper dive: Selected scholarly reviews
Memory Allocation: Mechanisms and Function, Annual Review of Neuroscience
Understanding how neurons are selected to store memory traces, or engrams, in the brain may provide insight into how the brain manages information and what goes wrong in certain mental disorders.
www.annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/annurev-neuro-080317-06...
===
Knowable Magazine from Annual Reviews is a digital publication that seeks to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. Through compelling articles, beautiful graphics, engaging videos and more, Knowable Magazine explores the real-world impact of research through a journalistic lens. All content is rooted in deep reporting and undergoes a thorough fact-checking before publication.
The Knowable Magazine Science Graphics Library is an initiative to create freely available, accurate and engaging graphics for teachers and students. All graphics are curated from Knowable Magazine articles and are free for classroom use.
Knowable Magazine is an editorially independent initiative produced by Annual Reviews, a nonprofit publisher dedicated to synthesizing and integrating knowledge for the progress of science and the benefit of society.
==
We love to hear how teachers are using our graphics. Contact us: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
This graphic is available for free for in-classroom use. Contact us to arrange permission for any other use: knowablemagazine.org/contact-us
Location: Iowa Avenue at Gilbert Street, Iowa City - January 3, 2017
Partial demolition of Seashore Hall will make way for the new 58,400 square foot $33.5 million building, which will extend into a former parking lot. The 3-story brick structure will be demolished first. After the new building is completed in the summer of 2019 the remainder of Seashore Hall will be demolished.
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
Near completion and with the removal of the crane, my fun with Putting the Needle on the Record concept photos comes to an end. At least from this location. You can view the others at these links:
www.flickr.com/photos/nature-and-i/13887836037/in/set-721...
www.flickr.com/photos/nature-and-i/15747757674/in/set-721...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
OCD and Hoarding: Cleaning Up the Problem
Presenters: Dr. Neil Rector, Dr. Nikola Grujich, Dr. Sophie Grigoriadis. Peggy Richter, Dr. Anthony Levitt (moderator)
Tuesday, January 17, 2011, 6:30 PM
Webcast: alex2.sunnybrook.ca/mediasite/Viewer/?peid=4a024a95390a41...
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
NIDA volunteers and local parents and kids participate at the USA Science & Engineering Festival 2016 in Washington, DC.
Last Saturday, Billy Wilder crashed his sports car while under the influence of sugar. He was immediately rushed to his mother's arms and the only injury he suffered was some bruising of his ego. Billy's mom promised to mount a national campaign to prevent these types of accidents of ever occurring again. Quoting Ms. Wilder, "If the government won't prevent these sugar related accidents from happening then I will." Billy also has sworn off the use of sugar while driving and is committing his life to brain science to study the effects of sugar on pre-teen drivers.