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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Dennis OConnor

Dennis OConnor

Doctors' Expectations Make Pain Treatments More Effective, Research Finds : Shots - Hea... - 0 views

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    "If there's one thing you do want to catch from a trip to your doctor, it's her optimism. A new study, published Monday in the journal Nature Human Behavior, finds that patients can pick up on subtle facial cues from doctors that reveal the doctor's belief in how effective a treatment will be. And that can have a real impact on the patient's treatment outcome."
Dennis OConnor

The neuroscience of placebo effects: connecting context, learning and health - 0 views

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    "Abstract Placebo effects are beneficial effects that are attributable to the brain-mind responses to the context in which a treatment is delivered rather than to the specific actions of the drug. They are mediated by diverse processes - including learning, expectations and social cognition - and can influence various clinical and physiological outcomes related to health. Emerging neuroscience evidence implicates multiple brain systems and neurochemical mediators, including opioids and dopamine. We present an empirical review of the brain systems that are involved in placebo effects, focusing on placebo analgesia, and a conceptual framework linking these findings to the mind-brain processes that mediate them. This framework suggests that the neuropsychological processes that mediate placebo effects may be crucial for a wide array of therapeutic approaches, including many drugs."
Dennis OConnor

Fast ForWord Language & Reading Intervention | Scientific Learning - 0 views

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    Keywords: neuroscience reading
Dennis OConnor

Fast ForWord Reading Intervention and Evidence for ESSA | Scientific Learning - 0 views

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    "Fast ForWord has 21 studies that meet WWC Evidence Standards for Adolescent Literacy, Beginning Reading and English Language Development - the most of any reading intervention evaluated. Positive effectiveness ratings and improvement indices were found for: Alphabetics Reading Fluency Comprehension English Language Development (largest improvement index of interventions evaluated) When compared to other interventions evaluated by WWC, Fast ForWord is the only intervention with positive effects for English Learner AND Literacy Outcomes for students grades K-10 in individual, small group, and whole class settings."
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    Keywords: neuroscience reading
Dennis OConnor

Our Founders' Story | Scientific Learning - 0 views

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    "The story of Scientific Learning begins with four research scientists: Michael Merzenich, William Jenkins, Paula Tallal, and Steven Miller. When the work of these four scientists intersected, their collaboration proved that the underlying cognitive processes that influence speech and language problems could be identified-and permanently improved. These findings led to the development of the Fast ForWord program, a groundbreaking computer-based reading intervention. The scientists then founded Scientific Learning to bring their program out of the lab and into the lives of struggling readers."
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    Keywords: neuroscience reading
Dennis OConnor

Ted J. Kaptchuk | Selected Articles - 0 views

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    "PLACEBO STUDIES"
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    Keyword: Placebo
Dennis OConnor

Ted J. Kaptchuk | Publications - 0 views

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    "PUBLICATIONS" Ted J. Kaptchuk is Professor of Medicine and Professor of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Director of the Harvard-wide Program in Placebo Studies and the Therapeutic Encounter (PiPS) at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts
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    Keyword: Placebo
Dennis OConnor

Like Mind, Like Body Podcast - Curable Health - 0 views

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    "Can our thoughts and feelings really miraculously heal, or slowly destroy our physical health and well being? Join us as we interview top researchers, best-selling authors, and field experts about the astonishing ways the mind can affect the body. Powered by Curable, an online program that uses mindbody techniques to relieve chronic pain."
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    Keyword: Placebo
Dennis OConnor

About Us - Valisure: Meet the Valisure team working to validate your meds - 0 views

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    "Valisure's mission is to bring transparency and increased quality to the pharmaceutical industry, and to deliver these benefits direct to consumers. We hope to achieve this through focusing on patient advocacy, consumer protection, and performing advanced research and development."
Dennis OConnor

#75 - David Light: Zantac recall due to cancer concerns - what you need to know - Peter... - 0 views

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    Vicky NewmanThis is REALLY an important podcast https://peterattiamd.com/davidlight/ -- Podcast -- #75 - David Light: Zantac recall due to cancer concerns - what you need to know. Makes me think that those of us in Project Apollo cohort should be able to obtain our prescribed meds through this online pharmacy to insure drug efficacy. Please send link to cohort & let's discuss possibility of using this online pharmacy. Best, Vicky
Dennis OConnor

Memory enhancement in healthy older adults using a brain plasticity-based training prog... - 1 views

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    Henry W. Mahncke*†, Bonnie B. Connor*, Jed Appelman*, Omar N. Ahsanuddin*, Joseph L. Hardy*, Richard A. Wood*,Nicholas M. Joyce*, Tania Boniske*, Sharona M. Atkins*, and Michael M. Merzenich*†‡*Posit Science Corporation, 225 Bush Street, San Francisco, CA 94104; and‡Keck Center for Integrative Neurosciences, University of California, 513 ParnassusAvenue, Box 0472, Room HSE-836, San Francisco, CA 94143Contributed by Michael M. Merzenich, June 27, 2006
Dennis OConnor

NeuroGym - The Science - 0 views

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    "Repeatable, Practical, Proven, Peer-Reviewed Science From cradle to the grave, your brain will process more events than there are stars in our universe. As your body's "central processing unit," your brain is in charge of a staggering array of functions, from processing and perceiving stimuli to motor control and memory storage. Habits and beliefs programmed into your mind over a lifetime of responding to experiences are stored in long-term memory, and may cause you to resist new ways of doing things. However, rapid shifts in neural activity can create new associations, habits or beliefs.1 NeuroGym's "Innercising" methods help you to adopt new perceptions and behaviors and solve old problems quickly and efficiently. Moreover, Innercising® applies practical mental training techniques shown through scientific research to improve mental and emotional functioning. 1. Sánchez-Cañizares, J. (2014). The role of consciousness in triggering intellectual habits. Frontiers in human neuroscience, 8."
Dennis OConnor

Neuroplasticity: This Is How to Rewire Your Brain for Success - 0 views

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    "Neuroscience confirms that your brain changes throughout your lifetime, which is a concept known as neuroplasticity. It's the term used to describe a sequence of processes that take place in your brain in response to incoming stimuli. In other words, your emotions, behaviors, experiences, and thoughts physically change the way your brain functions."
Dennis OConnor

Publications | Path to Reading - 0 views

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    "Neuroscience Behind PATH program:"
Dennis OConnor

At the Cusp of Solving Cognitive Aging? - Mike Merzenich - Medium - 0 views

  • Bookmark story
  • the ACTIVE Study.
  • hree different theories
  • ...24 more annotations...
  • memory
  • reasoning
  • speed of processing
  • ACTIVE tracked people for 10 years
  • 74 to 84
  • who would have expected faster cognitive processing speed 10 years later
  • The big question was do those gains transfer to real-world activities.And, the answer is: they do.
  • At the end of 10 years
  • about three years more protection against decline
  • speed training
  • ● 38% less risk of onset of depressive symptoms● 30% less risk of deepening of depressive symptoms● 68% stronger feeling of confidence and control● 48% less risk of at-fault car crashes
  • I (Mike Merzenich) have spent decades studying brain plasticity — the brain’s ability to change (at any age), chemically, structurally and functionally.
  • What changes in the brain as it gets older?
  • basic science question
  • every single thing we measured in the aging brain changed (and none for the better).
  • The top row
  • we built a brain-training program designed to make a rat’s brain faster and more accurate.
  • to improve auditory precision and speed.
  • It turns out that this kind of brain training — continuously and progressively challenging the speed and accuracy of brain processing — improves every aspect of brain health we could measure.
  • we could build, test, refine and validate a training program to improve all the major systems of the brain.
  • plasticity-based training
  • cognition (eg, speed, attention, memory, executive function)
  • quality of life (eg, mood, confidence, self-rated health)
  • dementia?
Dennis OConnor

Osteopathic Medical Associates - San Diego - 0 views

shared by Dennis OConnor on 13 Oct 19 - No Cached
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    Website for our center
Dennis OConnor

Lyme Disease Stories | Bay Area Lyme Foundation - 0 views

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    Impressive line up of patient stories. Are you interested in sharing your story? We'd like to hear from you."
Dennis OConnor

Bay Area Lyme Foundation - Website - 1 views

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    "Bay Area Lyme Foundation 884 Portola Road, Suite A7 Portola Valley, CA 94028"
Dennis OConnor

In Search of a Cure for Lyme Disease: The Disulfiram Story | Bay Area Lyme Foundation - 0 views

  • What does an anti-alcoholism drug have to do with Lyme disease? Nothing—until a 2016 study funded by Bay Area Lyme Foundation found a link. From around 2014 through 2017, two labs on opposite coasts—one at Johns Hopkins University and one at Stanford—were testing thousands of FDA-approved drugs to identify an existing drug that worked against “persister” forms of Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), the bacteria that causes Lyme disease(1,2,3,4). Why were they doing this?
Dennis OConnor

ReWalk 6.0 - 0 views

shared by Dennis OConnor on 08 Oct 19 - No Cached
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    Janice O'Connor will be testing this device at VIP Nuero-Rehab on 10/10/19 "It's not just walking - it's More Than Walking: ReWalk is a wearable robotic exoskeleton that provides powered hip and knee motion to enable individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI) to stand upright, walk, turn, and climb and descend stairs*. ReWalk is the first exoskeleton to receive FDA clearance for personal and rehabilitation use in the United States."
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