056 - Dementia Prediction, Button Dogs, Prosody, and Ink Therapy - HealthHippieMD Week In Review
Mind Your Risk: New Tool Predicts Dementia Likelihood
To crack the code of dementia risks, researchers have unveiled an innovative tool that forecasts an individual's chances of developing the condition within the next 14 years. This predictive model, known as the U.K. Biobank Dementia Risk Score (UKBDRS), delves into 11 crucial factors, including age, education, diabetes history, depression history, stroke history, parental dementia history, deprivation levels, blood pressure, cholesterol levels, living arrangement, and gender. The tool, which also considers the influence of the APOE gene, trumps other risk assessments and offers a 40% chance of preventing cases by targeting modifiable factors. Dementia risk study finds 11 key factors behind condition.
Feeling the Beat: Haptic Suits
This article features haptic suits—backpack-like devices that translate music into vibrations on the skin. Haptic technology advancements have fueled innovations in creating shared musical experiences for all concertgoers, blurring the lines between hearing and feeling the groove. Haptic Suits Let You Feel Music Through Your Skin - The New York Times. (gift article)
Another Brick in the Wall: Neuroscience of Prosody
You may have heard scientists recreated parts of Pink Floyd's Another Brick in the Wall using only the brain's electrical signals. Here is a short video on the research and its implications: Tuning into the Brain's Music: Decoding Song from Brainwaves - Neuroscience News.
Button Dogs
If you spend time on TikTok or Instagram, you're probably familiar with "button dogs" who communicate with their families by stepping on electronic pads that speak words when pressed. Can dogs use language in this way? Scientific American elaborates: Can Dogs Use Language? - Scientific American.
Nurses TRAPped
Healthcare employers use a sneaky tactic called "Training Repayment Agreements" (or TRAPs) to keep nurses from leaving their jobs. These agreements make nurses repay training costs if they quit within a specific time, essentially trapping them with financial obligations. Neil Rudis, a nurse, found himself stuck in this web, unable to leave due to the debt. These debt-based schemes are rising in nursing as companies try to deter nurses from changing jobs. While some companies are ditching TRAPs, many nurses still grapple with these financial shackles, affecting their well-being and worsening workforce shortages. Health Care Companies Are Using Debt to Trap Nurses on the Job – Mother Jones.
Feed Me: A.I. Sparks Race for Information
The escalating demand for A.I. model training data prompts a creative scramble among A.I. makers. As larger models require vast datasets, A.I. companies are hunting for new sources of information while organizations with substantial data holdings seek ways to monetize them. This article discusses how the scarcity of quality training text, the legal battles around copyright infringement, and the push for compensation for ingested material reshape the A.I. landscape. The pursuit of data has led to partnerships and deals with media outlets, record labels, scientific publishers, and other data-rich entities, igniting a fervent competition for valuable information. A.I. is setting off a great scramble for data.
Sleep Debt
A large percentage of the American public is sleep-deprived. Unfortunately, repaying a sleep debt is more demanding than you might think: Here's why there's no quick fix for sleep deprivation - Big Think.
Aging Well
Aging isn't a one-size-fits-all journey – it's a tangled interplay of biology and environment. This expert breakdown by biologist Ellen Quarles reveals why aging is a unique experience for each person and even for cells within our bodies. Unraveling the intricate web of cellular processes, from DNA repair to protein recycling, Quarles explains how aging disrupts this delicate network. While there's no magic cure, interventions that target multiple critical cellular processes might hold the key to extending our healthier years. So, don't expect a universal anti-aging remedy, but rather embrace the intricate puzzle of your own unique aging path. Aging is complicated – a biologist explains why no two people or cells age the same way, and what this means for anti-aging interventions.
Nurturing Gut Microbes for Well-Being
Your body is a reflection of what you eat. These Gut Microbes Are Crucial To Well-Being — What To Eat To Cultivate Them delves into the pivotal role of gut microbes in regulating your well-being.
Drug Cost and Value-Based Pricing
When Dying Patients Want Unproven Drugs | The New Yorker got me thinking about incentives for the pharmaceutical industry in the U.S. I went down a rabbit hole and ended up learning quite a bit about value-based pharmaceutical pricing. Value-Based Pricing of Prescription Drugs Benefits Patients and Promotes Innovation - Center for American Progress. is well worth a read.
A.I. Helps Stroke Survivor Speak Again
In a heartwarming breakthrough combining neuroscience and artificial intelligence, a paralyzed woman's thoughts are translated into speech through an avatar. Ann Johnson, who lost her speaking ability after a stroke at 30, saw her brain signals converted into vocalized language by implanted electrodes. This achievement, reported in the journal Nature, is a first in synthesizing spoken words and facial expressions directly from brain activity. This milestone holds promise for those who've lost speech due to strokes or conditions like cerebral palsy. The aim? To restore not just words but the essence of who people are. A.I. Helps a Stroke Patient Speak Again, a Milestone for Tech and Neuroscience - The New York Times. (gift article)
Avocado Odyssey
Avocado aficionados know the disappointment of bringing home what appears to be the perfect avocado only to find it mushy or tasteless. The capricious nature of avocados is due to their unique ripening process, setting them apart from other fruits. The article, How to select a perfectly ripe avocado. delves into choosing the perfect avocado.
Ink Therapy
A new study suggests that combatting post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) could be as simple as putting pen to paper. This innovative treatment involves supervised 30-minute writing sessions where patients recount their traumatic experiences. , this approach proved as effective as traditional talk therapy in a study involving 178 veterans. Importantly, dropout rates were significantly lower in the writing group. This method, known as written exposure therapy, inspired by "expressive writing" experiments from the 1980s, offers a quicker, potentially more accessible alternative to established PTSD treatments. As the field evolves, the healing power of words gains renewed attention. Writing Therapy Shows Promise for PTSD - The New York Times. (gift article)