Amy Jones 5/6/12 Amy Jones 5/6/12 the nyt on new thoughts about antidepressants : do they make us act better and then we feel better? “But the most profound implications have to do with how to understand the link between the growth of neurons, the changes in mood and the alteration of behavior. Perhaps antidepressants like Prozac and Paxil primarily alter behavioral circuits in the brain — particularly the circuits deep in the hippocampus where memories and learned behaviors are stored and organized — and consequently change mood. If Prozac helped Dorothy sleep better and stopped her from assaulting her own skin, might her mood eventually have healed as a response to her own alterations of behavior? Might Dorothy, in short, have created her own placebo effect? How much of mood is behavior anyway? Maybe your brain makes you “act” depressed, and then you “feel” depressed. Or you feel depressed in part because your brain is making you act depressed. Thoughts like these quickly transcend psychiatry and move into more unexpected and unsettling realms. They might begin with mood disorders, but they quickly turn to questions about the organizational order of the brain.” Read More Amy Jones 3/13/12 Amy Jones 3/13/12 harvard does acid again: a new meta-analysis of six studies on the use of lsd to treat alcoholism “It was not unusual for patients following their LSD experience to become much more self-accepting, to show greater openness and accessibility, and to adopt a more positive, optimistic view of their capacities to face future problems.” Read More Amy Jones 1/4/12 Amy Jones 1/4/12 extraordinary article about expanding our concept of the placebo effect in the new yorker (behind the paywall) Read More Amy Jones 8/2/11 Amy Jones 8/2/11 an essay on the unpredictability of drug addiction in the nyt juergen teller (photo) Read More Amy Jones 7/29/11 Amy Jones 7/29/11 nyt book review: freud and cocaine Read More
Amy Jones 5/6/12 Amy Jones 5/6/12 the nyt on new thoughts about antidepressants : do they make us act better and then we feel better? “But the most profound implications have to do with how to understand the link between the growth of neurons, the changes in mood and the alteration of behavior. Perhaps antidepressants like Prozac and Paxil primarily alter behavioral circuits in the brain — particularly the circuits deep in the hippocampus where memories and learned behaviors are stored and organized — and consequently change mood. If Prozac helped Dorothy sleep better and stopped her from assaulting her own skin, might her mood eventually have healed as a response to her own alterations of behavior? Might Dorothy, in short, have created her own placebo effect? How much of mood is behavior anyway? Maybe your brain makes you “act” depressed, and then you “feel” depressed. Or you feel depressed in part because your brain is making you act depressed. Thoughts like these quickly transcend psychiatry and move into more unexpected and unsettling realms. They might begin with mood disorders, but they quickly turn to questions about the organizational order of the brain.” Read More
Amy Jones 3/13/12 Amy Jones 3/13/12 harvard does acid again: a new meta-analysis of six studies on the use of lsd to treat alcoholism “It was not unusual for patients following their LSD experience to become much more self-accepting, to show greater openness and accessibility, and to adopt a more positive, optimistic view of their capacities to face future problems.” Read More
Amy Jones 1/4/12 Amy Jones 1/4/12 extraordinary article about expanding our concept of the placebo effect in the new yorker (behind the paywall) Read More
Amy Jones 8/2/11 Amy Jones 8/2/11 an essay on the unpredictability of drug addiction in the nyt juergen teller (photo) Read More