Archive for October, 2007

October 8, 2007: 12:09 pm: AlvaroUncategorized

AspenThe Aspen Health Forum gathered an impressive group of around 250 people to discuss the most pressing issues in Health and Medical Science (check out the Program and the Speakers bios), on October 3-6th. It was the first conference, by the way, where I have heard a speaker say: "I resuscitated a woman yesterday".

Key highlights and trends:

1- Global health problems require the attention of the scientific community. Richard Klausner encouraged the scientific community to focus on Global Problems: maternal mortality rates, HIV/ AIDS, nutrition, cancer, clean water.  Bill Frist, former Senate Majority Leader, added to that list the increasing epidemic risks of global zootic diseases (transmitted between humans and animals), supported by 2 interesting data points: at any one moment, there are 500,000 people flying worldwide; in a year, airlines transport the equivalent of 2 billion passengers.

2- "Let's get real...Ideology kills". Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland, on what it takes to stop HIV/ AIDS: "I am from Ireland, a Catholic country. And I am Catholic. But I can see how ideology kills..we need more empathy with reality, and to work with local women in those countries who need things like female condoms." She was implicitly criticizing the large budget devoted to unrealistic abstinence programs. This session included a fascinating exchange where Bill Frist rose from the audience to defend the role of US aid, explaining how 60% of retroviral drugs in African countries have been funded by the American taxpayer, highlighting President Bush's courage to make HIV/AIDS a top agenda item in many developing countries, and criticizing other countries for not doing enough. Which made Nobel Prize Laureate Peter Agre, also in the audience, stand up and encourage the US to really step up to the plate and devote 1% of the GDP to aid, as a number of European countries do, instead of 0.1%.

3- Where is the new "Sputnik"?: Basic science is crucial for innovation and for economic growth, but it is often underappreciated. Scientists are not "nerds", as sometimes they are portrayed in popular culture, but people with a deep curiosity and drive to solve a Big problem. Many of the speakers had been inspired by the Sputnik and the Apollo missions to become scientists, at a time when the profession was considered cool. Two Nobel Prize Laureates (Peter Agre, Michael Bishop), talked about their lives and careers trying to demystify what it takes to be a scientist and to win a Nobel Prize. Both are grateful to the taxpayers dollars that funded their research, and insist we must do a better job at explaining the Sputnikscientific process to society at large. Both are proud of having attended small liberal arts colleges, and having evolved from there, fueled by their great curiosity and unpredictable, serendipitous paths, into launching new scientific and medical fields.  Bishop listed a number of times where he made decisions that were considered "career suicide" by mentors and colleagues, and mentioned "I was confused" around 15 times in 15 minutes...down to earth and inspiring.

4- We need a true Health Care Culture: Mark Ganz summarized it best by explaining how his health provider group improved care when they redefined themselves from "we are 7,000 employees" to "we are a 3 million strong community", moving from being a cost controller with a paternalistic attitude to a health facilitator, looking underneath symptoms to identify and deal with underlying patterns. Mark also announced the launch of the Aspen Health Stewardship Project to 1) identify levers to change the culture of control, 2) frame the upcoming political health care debate, 3) create a reportcard to screen all political proposals. Will be interesting to check the progress of the initiative in next year's conference.

Related to this, there were panels on how to improve Medical Education, including training doctors to be members of a team and improve patient-based problem solving and "soft skills" such as how to apologize to patients and their families. And on Electronic Medical Records, that have proven to reduce medical mistakes and overall healthcare system costs, yet many physicians resist their use due to the time required to fill out the online forms and workflow changes required. An interesting data point: in 65% of visits to the doctor these days, patients bring something printed from the internet.

5- You can't manage what you can't measure. We heard many times how defining and measuring outcomes, so common in the private sector, is critical to ensuring a good allocation of resources in the health and scientific fields, that use so much taxpayer money. For example. NIH funding grew from $9B in 1994 to $29B in 2007, yet the results are not clear. The same happened with health care as a whole, a sector that now consumes 16% of the US GDP with health outcomes (infant mortality, patient deaths in hospitals) worse than other countries that invest far less. There is an apparent consensus that science and healthcare need more resources but will only get them once they clean house. 

6- The rising role of public-private partnerships: There are multiple initiatives launched to bridge the increasing gap between academia and industry. The Foundation for the NIH has facilitated key conversation between the FDA and pharma companies. The Gates and Clinton Foundations have launched innovative partnership models to tackle global health problems. The Myelin Repair Foundation was launched to build bridges once its founder, who had "assumed someone had a plan", discovered that little progress had happened in 20 years to help patients with multiple sclerosis. 

7- From Lifespan to Health-span. Population distribution in developed countries is shifting from a "population pypupulation pyramidramid" to a "population rectangle" (see Japan population "pyramid", right). There was a good deal of emphasis on the biology of aging and healthy aging, both on how the environment can regulate gene activation and on genetics. Cynthia Kenyon, a UCSF researcher showed her research on how disabling one specific gene in a worm can double that worm's lifespan, and mentioned how that study has been replicated with fruit flies and mice, and could, conceptually, help humans live longer & healthier lives. The point of much ongoing research is not "how to spend more time on the nursing home" but how to slow down the process of aging, so we can live healthier longer.

8- Patient-advocacy groups are having an impact. We heard many examples on how small groups of motivated individuals have built large patient advocate movements that influence public policy. Michael Milken talked about the Cancer March, that helped increase NIH funding from $1.5B to 5$B. Hala Moddelmog, from the Susan G. Komen for the Cure, explained how they have 1 million people engaged in promoting cancer research and prevention. Robert Klein, key advocate of the California Proposition 71 (that will provide $6B for stem cell research through long-term bonds) explained how the proposition was passed, including engaging over 80 patient-advocacy groups.

9- There's a new emphasis on understanding "how systems work" instead of "how isolated genes make things happen on their own": Genomics is starting to help predict susceptibility to disease and to therapies. Now, we must remember the difference between strong and weak genes (only specific combinations of which may create predispositions), and keep in mind the role of our experience and environment in turning some genes on or off. Regis Kelly provided a wonderful overview of neuroimaging, learning and neuroplasticity, and highlighted how many biologists are moving from thinking about "how genes make things happen" to "how systems work", given than in humans manipulating just one gene may trigger changes in 500 others.

10- The importance of our Lifestyle-Each of us owns our own health. 70% of heathcare costs derive from lifestyle-related diseases (such as smoking-induced cancer). We heard several calls to action for insurance companies to incentivize behavior modification to promote good lifestyle habits that improve quality of life and can delay disease symptoms, resulting in billions of dollars of cost savings. Yet, in my view, the discussion was too conceptual in this area, and not specific or action-oriented enough.

In short, a very stimulating inaugural 3-day conference. I hope the one next year is even better, and includes more in-depth conversations on the role of prevention and lifestyle in driving health outcomes, and builds more bridges with neuroscience and psychology. I would suspect the topics discussed in our Neuroscience Interview Series will have significant implications on the growing healthcare and prevention debate.

Update: you may enjoy the post The Alfred Nobel legacy: 2007 Nobel Prizes.

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October 6, 2007: 2:37 pm: AlvaroUncategorized

Great article on the growing brain fitness field. Rethinking the Brain Business: Why a mental-fitness program may be the start of something big. Some quotes:

- "But Merzenich has loftier ambitions. He envisions his company as part of a new industry that will become a "mirror" of the drug industry. He wants to go far beyond simply sharpening memory and cognitive ability to tackle diseases as well. Instead of medications, he sees a business rooted in neuroscience that will use noninvasive computer exercises to rewire the brain, gradually training it back to mental health."

- For now, Merzenich believes the emerging field of "brain health" is cluttered with bad science. He singled out Nintendo's brain games as an example of a product that has no science to back up its claims. But he doesn't expect that to last.

- "This field is undisciplined now and full of trash," he says. "But it will mature and ultimately the snake oil will be cleaned up. It will grow like the fitness industry from almost nowhere. And it will become a part of everyday life."

For help on how to evaluate the growing number of programs, check out our Brain Fitness Program evaluation checklist.

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October 5, 2007: 2:01 am: AlvaroUncategorized

First full day of the 3-day conference, some highlights from the panels I attended (a small fraction of the incredible variety offered):

UPDATE (October 8th, 2007): you can find a full write-up of my impressions of the 3-day conference at 10 Highlights from the Aspen Health Forum and a very timely post on The Alfred Nobel legacy: 2007 Nobel Prizes.

- 2 Nobel Prize Laureates (Peter Agre, Michael Bishop), talking about their lives and careers trying to demystify what it takes to be a scientist and to win a Nobel Prize. Both are grateful to the taxpayers dollars that funded their research, and insist we must do a better job at explaining the scientific process to society at large. Both proud of having attended small liberal arts colleges, and having evolved from there, fueled by their personal curiosity and unpredictable, serendipitous paths, into launching new scientific and medical fields.  Bishop lists a number of times where he made decisions that were considered "career suicides" by some mentors and colleagues, and mentions "I was confused" around 15 times in 15 minutes. Demystifying, and inspiring.

- Some of their policy recommendations to improve the development of good scientists: 1) start early in the school system with hands-on experiments, 2) foster a spirit of free inquiry by allowing flexible funding (i.e., don't micromanage scientists or their labs), 3) pay more attention to a rigorous process driven by personal curiosity than to achieving specific outcomes-they feel many young scientists have too much pressure on their shoulders to achieve too much too quickly.

- UCSF's Regis Kelly provides a wonderful overview of neuroimaging, learning and neuroplasticity, and highlights how many biologists are moving from thinking "how genes make things happen" to "how systems work", given than in humans manipulating just one gene may trigger changes in 500 other genes.

- Another UCSF researcher shows her research on how disabling one specific gen in a worm can double that worm's lifespan, and mentions how that study has been replicated with fruit flies and mice, and could, conceptually, help humans live longer & healthy lives.

- A session on the Mind & the Brain where we see the evolutionary trade-off of a genetic variation: having one specific mutation of the COMT gene gives, on average, better attentional control and memory, but at the cost of being less resistance to stress and lower pain threshold. The presenter summarizes it by saying that some human beings seem predisposed (not destined to) being warriors, and others...worriers.

- A panel on scientific investments featuring an honest debate on several broken areas: the process from basic research to applications (since pharma companies pay too much emphasis on multi-billion drugs), health care delivery, a peer-review process that concentrates too much funding on too few researchers, how to attract and retain young researchers, the lack of accountability and ROI measurement of the $29b spent by the NIH. Apparent consensus that science both needs more money but will only get it once it cleans its own house.

- Bill Frist provides a good overview on the risks of global zootic diseases (transmitted between humans and animals) advocating for a "one health, one medicine" movement to deal with increasing epidemic risks. 2 very interesting data points: at any one moment, there are 500,000 people flying worldwide. In a year, airlines transport the equivalent of 2 billion passengers.

- The premier of the PBS program "The Mysterious Human Heart" that will soon be released. Fascinating to see the miracle of daily life, and the amazing progress of medical science in helping people with heart conditions. Also, the dark side of progress: during the discussion, a doctor mentions that some of the life-threatening heart problems mentioned in the program actually can derive as side-effects from medication such as ADD/ ADHD stimulants.

UPDATE (October 8th, 2007): you can find a full write-up of my impressions of the 3-day conference at 10 Highlights from the Aspen Health Forum and a very timely post on The Alfred Nobel legacy: 2007 Nobel Prizes.

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October 2, 2007: 11:03 pm: Cognitive Psychology Arena - New TitlesUncategorized

The Handbook of Aging and Cognition

3rd Edition

  • Edited by Fergus I. M. Craik, Timothy A. Salthouse

Cognitive aging is a flourishing area of research. A significant amount of new data, a number of new theoretical notions, and many new research issues have been generated in the past ten years. This new edition reviews new findings and theories, enables the reader to assess where the field is today, and evaluates its points of growth. The chapters are organized to run from reviews of current work on neuroimaging, neuropsychology, genetics and the concept of brain reserve, through the 'mainstream' topics of attention, memory, knowledge and language, to a consideration of individual differences and of cognitive aging in a lifespan context. This edition continues to feature the broad range of its predecessors, while also providing critical assessments of current theories and findings.

ISBN: 9780805859904

Published October 03 2007 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

: 8:03 pm: AlvaroUncategorized

Crossword PuzzleFollowing our July and August editions, here you have our Monthly Digest of the Most Popular Blog Posts. Today, October 2nd, we will list the most popular September posts. You can consider it your monthly Brain Exercise Magazine.

(Also, remember that you can subscribe to receive our RSS feed, check our Topics section, and subscribe to our monthly newsletter at the top of this page).

 

Market News

Education, Training, Health events: some events I will blog about/ speak at over the next 2-weeks.

Brain Fitness and SharpBrains.com in the Press: including a great Washington Post article.

Brains Way Smarter Than Ours (and yours, probably): roundup of relevant news, including some Awards. 

News you can use

10 (Surprising) Memory Improvement Tips: on the relationship between stress and memory.

Judith Beck: Train Your Brain to Think Like a Thin Person: a cognitive therapy pioneer tells us about the latest application of brain training: diets.

Brain Wellness: Train Your Brain to Be Happier: our essay to participate in LifeTwo's Happiness week.

Research

11 Neuroscientists Debunk a Common Myth about Brain Training: summary of our 11 original interviews with leading neuroscientists and cognitive psychologists.

Neuroplasticity 101 and Brain Health Glossary: no one is born knowing it all...check this summary of concepts and keywords that can help navigate through the brain fitness field. 

Working Memory: an image that says much: bad and good news.

Best of the Brain from Scientific American: review of this great book.

An online application system is now open for the AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellowships.

Corporate Training & Leadership

Carnival of the capitalists with a brain: we hosted this business blog carnival with a brain spice.

Executive Functions and Google/ Microsoft Brain Teasers: examples of what our executive functions are.

Software Product News

MindFit by CogniFit, and Baroness Susan Greenfield: a brain fitness program starting to get traction in Europe.

Penn Treaty First To Offer Brain Fitness Program: today's press release on another brain training software (Posit Science)'s deal with an insurance provider.

Visualization Software of IBM for the Future of Medicine: Interview: “It’s like Google Earth for the body”. Hopefully it will include the brain. 

Brain Teasers

Brain Teasers with a Neuroscience angle: enjoy.

SharpBrains Announcements

Services: we will formally announce soon how we "help companies, health providers, investors, and policymakers understand and profit from the emerging brain fitness field."  But now you know.

Speaking: if your organization needs a good speaker and brain fitness expert, please contact us.

Finally, we are starting to look for qualified guest bloggers to add their perspective. If you are interested, please contact us and let us know about what you would like to write about, and include a brief bio or links to samples. Thank you.

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October 1, 2007: 10:02 pm: Cognitive Psychology Arena - New TitlesUncategorized

The Cognitive Neuroscience of Human Communication

  • By Vesna Mildner

This is a book about speech and language. It is primarily intended for those interested in speech and its neurophysiological bases: phoneticians, linguists, educators, speech therapists, psychologists, and neuroscientists. Although speech and language are its central topic, it provides information about related topics as well (e.g. structure and functioning of the central nervous system, research methods in neuroscience, theories and models of speech production and perception, learning, and memory). Data on clinical populations are given in parallel with studies of healthy subjects because such comparisons can give a better understanding of intact and disordered speech and language functions.

There is a review of literature (more than 600 sources) and research results covering areas such as neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, development of the nervous system, sex differences, history of neurolinguistics, behavioral, neuroimaging and other research methods in neuroscience, linguistics and psychology, theories and models of the nervous system function including speech and language processing, kinds of memory and learning and their neural substrates, critical periods, various aspects of normal speech and language processes (e.g. phonetics, phonology, syntax, semantics, reading), bilingualism, speech and language disorders, and many others.

Newcomers to the field of neurolinguistics will find it as readable as professionals will because it is organized in a way that gives the readers flexibility and an individual approach to the text. The language is simple but all the technical terms are provided, explained, and illustrated. A comprehensive glossary provides additional information.

ISBN: 9780805854350

Published December 19 2007 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

: 12:02 am: AlvaroUncategorized

Brain Fitness eventsIn what category does Brain Fitness fit? Education, Productivity and Training, Health? Most of the interest so far has come from a Healthy Aging angle, but we are starting to see broader interest, as in the events below. After all, isn't working on our brains relevant to all those markets?.

2 busy weeks: I am attending/ speaking at a variety of events. I will make sure to blog at least the take-aways from the main events daily, and Caroline will also add her perspective as much as possible.

A) October 3-6th: The Aspen Health Forum at the Aspen Institute

B) October 9th: First session my class The Science of Brain Health and Brain Fitness at the UC-Berkeley Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI)

C) October 10th: Teaching Brain Fitness in Your Community, workshop at an American Society on Aging (ASA) conference for health professionals

D) October 10th: Science at Work, Interview at the event The Future of Work: Amplified Individuals, Amplified Organizations, organized by the Institute for the Future

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A) October 3-6th: The Aspen Health Forum at the Aspen Institute. This promises to be a fascinating event. See below the panels I am attending-I will make sure to write some notes every day to keep you in the discussion.

Wednesday October 3rd:

Great Expectations: American Attitudes toward Personal Responsibility and Medicine

Healthcare Re-Imagined: Learning from Olympic Athletes

Thursday 4th:

The Damaged Brain: The Fight Against Neurodegeneration

The Human Element: A Candid Conversation about Pioneers of Modern Medicine  

The Last Frontier: The Mind

Global Scientific Investment

Science Versus the Biological Clock

The Mysterious Human Heart

Friday 5th:

What's Hot: Emerging Trends in Biotech, Pharma and Health IT

Cracking the Code: Life and Wellness in the Genomic Age

Innovation and Incentives: Can Breakthrough Science Survive Market Forces?

The New Scientific Power: The Role of Philanthropy, Patient Advocates, and Other Novel Partners in Changing Our Medical Future

The Electronic Prescription: How Information Technology Will Change the Face of Medicine

HIV and the World

Applying New Science to Global Health

Saturday 6th (I am flying back to SF on Saturday, so my notes probably won't appear till Sunday)

Biomedical Ethics

Health, Humanity and Politics: Prospects for Reform

The Female Body

Winning the Game of Life

B) October 9th: First session my class The Science of Brain Health and Brain Fitness at the UC-Berkeley Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI). We have over 35 registrants so far, with room available (think about it, if you are in the San Francisco Bay Area). A very beautiful detail I just discovered while checkling out the list of students: there are several husband & wife teams attending the class together.  First reading assignment: Ten Important Truths About Aging.

Description: Neuroscientists have shown how the human brain retains neuroplasticity (the ability to rewire itself) and neurogenesis (creation of new neurons) during its full lifetime, leading to a new understanding of what aging means. In this class, we will review the science behind some of the key concepts in this field and explore their implications on our lifestyles: neuroplasticity and neurogenesis, the Cognitive Reserve theory for healthy aging, computer-based cognitive training programs, emotional self-regulation, and the four pillars for lifelong Brain Health. We have all heard “Use it or lose it.” Latest research suggests “Use it and improve it.” Faculty: Alvaro Fernandez is CEO and co-founder of SharpBrains. He holds an M.A. in education and an M.B.A. from Stanford University. Fernandez started his career with McKinsey & Company and has participated in the launch and turnaround of several education companies, and has been teaching the class “Exercising Our Brains” at San Francisco State University Osher Lifelong Learning Center since 2005. 

C) October 10th: Teaching Brain Fitness in Your Community, workshop at an American Society on Aging (ASA) conference for health professionals.

Description: According to the Wall Street Journal, a new wave in brain health programs for older adults is moving through the country. What are you providing in your site? This session will give you a sampling of a model brain health series that you can conduct in your site. The session will introduce you to the science of brain fitness, including many engaging brain exercises to do individually or in a group. Exercise Your Brain: New Brain Research and Implications has been taught at several different Bay Area locations including the Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes.

Presenter: Alvaro Fernandez, MBA, MA, CEO and Founder, SharpBrains, San Francisco, CA .

D) October 10th: Science at Work, Interview at the event The Future of Work: Amplified Individuals, Amplified Organizations, organized by the Institute for the Future

Format: David Pescovitz, Research Director, Institute for the Future, interviews Alvaro Fernandez

Description: We are on the brink of a new “scientification” of work. Over the next decade, workplace science will more frequently draw from advances in neuroscience, biology, and mathematics, enabling design based on quantifiable information. Alvaro Fernandez, co-founder and CEO of SharpBrains, sits down with David Pescovitz to discuss how neuroscience can be used to improve productivity and thinking abilities, thus creating better workers. Immersive Missions: As Cognitive Resources Managers and Neurological Trainers, you’ll put the latest brain science to work—on yourselves! 

As promised, you can expect a write-up of the main take-aways during every event. Neurons, get ready!

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