World Music

NPR’s The World Cafe gets out “new and significant music and the artists who create it.” You can get livestreams and discover songs, as well as get recent sessions. The most recent is ‘Flowers’ for Kathleen Edwards.

BBC Music/World offers even greater range. DNA with DJ Edu is one of the most popular of all their World Shows.

National Geographic Music is also comprehensive, providing more information and background on particular countries and artists as well as the music. Here’s one from Sidestepper, a Colombian artist, who mixes cumbia, vallenato, and salsa.

Putumayo World Music provides collections of world music, often by themes. (Putumayo is, of course, located in Colombia.) They also have a weekly one-hour radio program.

Nikolas Rose, Neurosociology, and Neurochemical Selves

Nikolas Rose, a well-established sociologist at the London School of Economics, has become increasingly interested in how the brain sciences and sociology can constructively interact. Like many of us, his own intellectual history reflects this; originally trained as a biologist, he then switched to psychology before finally ending up in sociology. His older research centered on “social and political history of the human sciences, on the genealogy of subjectivity, on the history of empirical thought in sociology, and on changing rationalities and techniques of political power.”

Today, Rose has turned to “biological and genetic psychiatry and behavioural neuroscience, and its social, ethical, cultural and legal implications.” He has a recent book, The Politics of Life Itself: Biomedicine, Power, and Subjectivity in the Twenty-First Century. Here is one review describes it:

From tattoos to organ transplants, cosmetic surgery to circumcision, obsessive dieting to exercise, the practice of manipulating bodies is increasingly widespread. But have we passed into a new phase of manipulation evidenced by the prevalent use of medicine to adjust our moods, enhance sports performance, slow ageing or alter fetuses? Nikolas Rose . . . argues that a threshold has been crossed into a world of ‘biological citizenship’ in which humans view themselves at the molecular level, medicine is based on customization, and biology poses fewer and fewer limits on life.

On his site, Rose has several downloadable papers on topics such as biological citizenship and Foucault. But I’ll focus on one entitled “Becoming Neurochemical Selves.” As he opens the paper, Rose asks, “How did we come to think about our sadness as a condition called ‘depression’ caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain and amenable to treatment by drugs that would ‘rebalance’ these chemicals?” The chapter then presents an historical and sociological treatment of how we have gotten to this point, focused on pharmaceuticals. But as he notes, he could have just as easily started with brain imaging or genomics.

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Fat Cells Die?

Gina Kolata, whose book Rethinking Thin prompted a series of posts on obesity earlier, had a recent article, Study Finds That Fat Cells Die and Are Replaced. Every year ten percent of your fat cells die; every year they are replaced. This research reinforces the emerging conclusion that “losing or gaining weight affects only the amount of fat stored in the cells, not the number of cells.” It also leads to more questions:

“What determines how many fat cells are in a person’s body? When is that number determined? Is there a way to intervene so people end up with fewer fat cells when they reach adulthood? And could obesity be treated by making fat cells die faster than they are born?”

As the lead researcher Kirsty Spalding puts it, “The million-dollar question now is, What regulates this process? And where can we intervene?”

Not all scientists are so sanguine. Lester Salans, an old-timer in this area, answers, “I suspect that the body’s regulation of weight is so complex that if you intervene at this site, something else is going to happen to neutralize this intervention.”

And the real interventions, the ones that happen everyday? High-calorie processed foods; fast food restaurants on street corners; an increasingly sedentary lifestyle? Well, there’s a reason I stuck that image of David up.

More Resources

Columbia University’s Brain and Mind video archive has some prominent speakers of neuroscience, psychiatry, development, and the like. It’s quite a good collection of 15 videos, including Michael Rutter, Nora Volkow, John Searle, and Eric Kandel. The hat-tip goes to Neurophilosophy.

Psique has put up an impressive collection of online neuroscience resources, all sorts of tutorials and information, a link which I will definitely add to our Web Resources.

Over at the London School of Economics, the Brain, Self and Society program has put together an extraordinary list of worldwide links covering academic institutions and research centres, academic societies, neuro-blogs, history of neuroscience, and journals.

Indiana University’s online journal Mind/Brain has just released its latest issue. It’s a great collection, including David Bricker’s piece, What’s A Mind Made Of? and Douglas Hofstadter’s The Elusive Apple of My ‘I’ . And more stuff on autism, addiction and mental illness, stress and the brain, and language learning. The hat-tip goes to Thinking Meat, which has been linking to a lot of good stuff recently.

Laughing Rats and Biomedical Ironies

In the near future I’ll post a student-led series on humor and neuroanthropology, building off work we’ve done on breast cancer and humor over the past two years. So this had me poking around the web this morning, where I found this video on Jaak Panksepp and his laughing rats.

Panksepp sees laughter as having mammalian roots (Physiology and Behavior pdf), and as being grounded in affective neuroscience (the title of his book). As this informative interview on his intellectual career relates, he has built a bottom-up approach to understanding the brain and mind.

By coincidence, today I also happened to read an excerpt from Cynthia Willett’s forthcoming book, Irony in the Age of Empire: Comic Perspectives on Democracy and Freedom.

Continue reading “Laughing Rats and Biomedical Ironies”