Society of Biological Psychiatry SOBP
Society of Biological Psychiatry SOBP
  • Видео 87
  • Просмотров 64 347
Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Neuroscience and Psychiatry - Uma Rao
Interview with Uma Rao, MD from the University of California, Irvine . This video is sponsored by the Society of Biological Psychiatry and the Committee on Advancing Women in Leadership.
Просмотров: 42

Видео

Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Neuroscience and Psychiatry - Anissa Abi-Dargham
Просмотров 372 месяца назад
Interview with Anissa Abi-Dargham , MD from Stony Brook University. This video is sponsored by the Society of Biological Psychiatry and the Committee on Advancing Women in Leadership.
Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Neuroscience and Psychiatry - Linda Carpenter
Просмотров 272 месяца назад
Interview with Linda Carpenter, MD from Butler Hospital/Brown University. This video is sponsored by the Society of Biological Psychiatry and the Committee on Advancing Women in Leadership.
Wingo Et al , BP podcast
Просмотров 1283 года назад
February 26, 2021 - Authors Anke Hüls, Aliza Wingo, Michael Epstein, and Thomas Wingo join us for this group discussion on brain DNA methylation patterns and cognitive decline, led by Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor.
Garza Villereal Podcast
Просмотров 423 года назад
January 26, 2021 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Eduardo Garza-Villarreal about his recently published article that focuses on transcranial magnetic stimulation in cocaine use disorder. This article was published in Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging.
Dr Tony Grace Podcast
Просмотров 533 года назад
October 20, 2020 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Anthony Grace, discussing the environment and schizophrenia in relation to his recent article in the Journal.
Dr Eckstrand Podcast
Просмотров 453 года назад
December 9, 2020 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Kristen Eckstrand about her newly published article, which addresses how trauma exposure impacts prospective relationships between markers of reward circuitry function and affective symptom trajectories.
Dr Berridge Podcast
Просмотров 743 года назад
February 4, 2021 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Kent Berridge about his recently published article on stress, CRF, and relapse.
Dr Barch BP Live Final
Просмотров 363 года назад
October 20, 2020 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, talks with Dr. Deanna Barch about the launch of Biological Psychiatry: Global Open Science (BP:GOS), the newest offering in the Biological Psychiatry family of journals.
BP Live Dr Pollak
Просмотров 253 года назад
December 15, 2020 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Thomas Pollak about his recently published article on antibodies and first-episode psychosis in the Journal.
BP Live Drs Seney and Logan
Просмотров 453 года назад
April 8, 2021 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews authors Ryan Logan and Marianne Seney about their recently published article on sex differences in molecular rhythms in the human cortex in the Journal.
BP Live Dr Walker Final
Просмотров 2983 года назад
March 12, 2021 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Deena Walker to discuss her recently published article on sex differences in adolescent social stress and substance use vulnerability in the Journal.
Biological Psychiatry Live Dr Been
Просмотров 1113 года назад
December 1, 2020 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews author Laura Been, PhD, on the impact of estrogen withdrawal on oxytocin neurocircuitry related to her newly published article in the Journal.
Bangasser Podcast
Просмотров 413 года назад
July 23, 2020 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews senior author Dr. Debra Bangasser on her recently published article on stress, the cholinergic system, and attention.
BP Live Ames Podcast
Просмотров 5 тыс.3 года назад
June 18, 2021 - Dr. Tamar Gur, Biological Psychiatry’s social media editor, interviews Dr. Jennifer Ames and Dr. Christopher Eaton about their article the Journal recently published on the relationships between maternal psychiatric conditions, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor use during pregnancy, and neurodevelopmental disorders in offspring.
Strategic Plan Goal 4
Просмотров 383 года назад
Strategic Plan Goal 4
Strategic Plan Goal 3
Просмотров 573 года назад
Strategic Plan Goal 3
Strategic Plan Goal 2
Просмотров 473 года назад
Strategic Plan Goal 2
Strategic Plan Goal 1
Просмотров 683 года назад
Strategic Plan Goal 1
2020 SOBP Gold Medal Award: Suzanne Haber, MD
Просмотров 2543 года назад
2020 SOBP Gold Medal Award: Suzanne Haber, MD
2021 SOBP Gold Medal Award
Просмотров 733 года назад
2021 SOBP Gold Medal Award
2021 SOBP A E Bennett Basic Research Award
Просмотров 743 года назад
2021 SOBP A E Bennett Basic Research Award
2021 SOBP A E Bennett Clinical/Translational Research Award
Просмотров 783 года назад
2021 SOBP A E Bennett Clinical/Translational Research Award
2021 SOBP Educator Award
Просмотров 343 года назад
2021 SOBP Educator Award
2021 SOBP George N. Thompson Award
Просмотров 613 года назад
2021 SOBP George N. Thompson Award
2021 SOBP Somerfeld-Ziskind Award (Mayo)
Просмотров 593 года назад
2021 SOBP Somerfeld-Ziskind Award (Mayo)
2021 SOBP Somerfeld-Ziskind Award (Sevinc)
Просмотров 763 года назад
2021 SOBP Somerfeld-Ziskind Award (Sevinc)
2021 SOBP Humanitarian Award
Просмотров 243 года назад
2021 SOBP Humanitarian Award
Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Psychiatry and Neuroscience -Mary Phillips interview pt2
Просмотров 373 года назад
Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Psychiatry and Neuroscience -Mary Phillips interview pt2
Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Psychiatry and Neuroscience -Judy Ford
Просмотров 733 года назад
Society of Biological Psychiatry - Women in Psychiatry and Neuroscience -Judy Ford

Комментарии

  • @katharina1439
    @katharina1439 11 дней назад

    I was soooo stressed during pregnancy 😢

  • @grv91vr23
    @grv91vr23 Месяц назад

    Dangerous clown. He’s just a paid extension of the pharmaceutical industry that endangers vulnerable patients with biased flawed research to fill his pockets.

  • @generalb4005
    @generalb4005 9 месяцев назад

    Saw some research that low B6 raised Kynurenine levels in obese individuals, also saw more research around high levels of Kynurenine and its impact on MS,Depression, Schizophrenia, Epilepsy, Autism. Not suggesting that B6 is the cure but just curious if B6 and maybe higher levels of B6 intake could reduce Kynurenine levels in the body. Dr Rhonda Patrick has a video on how exercise can reduce Kynurenine levels as well.

  • @JCurtis-p1y
    @JCurtis-p1y 11 месяцев назад

    Has anyone got M.E. and used the device? Any probs/higher sensation on forehead?

    • @UsandEveryoneWeKnow
      @UsandEveryoneWeKnow 11 месяцев назад

      I am always exhausted but it's been put down to depression, it's helped a bit with sleep quality. Also get dermatitis on my face at times and where the electrodes go it has flared it up, but seems to be easing as I get used to it. No sensitivity after using, only during (a stinging/ burning feeling).

  • @MerlinSingh
    @MerlinSingh Год назад

    What do people here think about Flow? It’s possible to buy now. But quite pricy for the regular person

    • @UsandEveryoneWeKnow
      @UsandEveryoneWeKnow 11 месяцев назад

      I'm using it, there's a 30 day money back. I think you can rent for 3 months then buy at a discount, so it works out about the same price in the end, factoring in the pads they send with rental. I've had depression that's spanned decades, quite debilitating I'd say, been on every medication going (lots of antidepressants and also anti-convulsants) some quite nasty. I wasn't expecting to feel anything with flow but it actually made me feel a little stoned/sleepy. I struggled to do it on the days you are meant to, but have been forcing myself. The process can be annoying, but staying with it. I suffered deeply with my sleep and that caused more depression and exhaustion, so it helping me sleep a bit has been of some relief. I do feel a bit funny for a bit after using it, foggy, but think that's easing with use, and I like to do it just before bed (phone on night setting, so no blue light when using the app) to aid sleep. Still struggling and have days when I've felt crappy, but do think it's somewhat helping me and taking the edge off, which I'll take. Feeling a bit better hasn't necessarily translated into doing more, or getting things done that I need to, just more of a sense of calm. I've noticed for example if something happens that really upsets me and I cry, I can tell I'm upset, and know I'm crying, but don't feel the tense pain in my head that I'd normally get along with that, so slightly numbing. Still only on week 3, so not sure if there will be any further benefit. I know from reading some people don't get a benefit until week 4. And reviews are 50/50, some get nothing, whereas others who have been in very dire straits have had their lives transformed. I'm definitely a tough case, won't go into it, but relatively pleased with even just help with sleep. There is a Facebook group where you can read other people's experiences, good and bad and get a range of people's feelings on it.

    • @UsandEveryoneWeKnow
      @UsandEveryoneWeKnow 11 месяцев назад

      Apologies for just repeatedly adding my postal tracking number for an item! 😂 My phone's playing up, froze and just repeatedly added it as a reply as I hacked at the touchscreen.

  • @Starchaser63
    @Starchaser63 Год назад

    Essential Amino Acids and magnesium Glycinate are supplements I benefit from along with a balanced mineral formula.

  • @criticadorauniversal
    @criticadorauniversal Год назад

    Well, all this is perfect, but if you have high levels of kynurenine and quinolinic, it seems that you have inflammation. If you reduce inflammation, you reduce kynurenine and therefore increase serotonin, why isn't inflammation reduced in medicine? What treatment is being offered today for this reduction?

  • @kennethgarcia25
    @kennethgarcia25 Год назад

    All this work by Koob and Virkow has laid out an important understanding of the primitive pathways which provide organisms with motivation to act. However, it should not be a surprise that, just like we have opposing muscle groups as the mechanism for providing precise control of our actions, there is this system underlying our decisions to act in one way or another. But the brain is a hierarchical computational device. And all these more linear systems have been easier to demonstrate using our tried and true 16th century scientific methodology. The human CNS has another layer which makes us HUMAN! Nora finally heard me when I spoke of personality disorders during her talks. What I am referring to is the fact that human beings have a mind and that higher layer provides top-down influence on all these lower level mechanisms to provide us with modulatory control to a great extent! While the lower mechanisms produce profound effects when manipulated, as long as they retain a range of functionality that functionality can be modified by our intentions! If we are to retain our humanity, therapeutic interventions must efficiently explore reinforcing top-down control lest the patient face the profound side-effects of dealing with the less subtle, more powerful lower level control systems in a less than physiologically allostatic manner.

  • @rlanetta9767
    @rlanetta9767 Год назад

    And oh the possibilities in the hands of evil ones. You take responsibility for your actions . Can you say crimes against humanity in the United States? One of my fav pastime quotes, it's not me, it's the rest of the world that's fucked up. Piece of mind I assure you. It's not love.

    • @Tommy-lq2rk
      @Tommy-lq2rk Год назад

      For real they might hurt and destroy a whole lot of people lives and not take responsibility for it. This is basically strong brainsmog which can trigger a whole lot of brain problems and autoimmune diseases. I used this for 1 month but never again. I regret it a lot. This is dangerous stuff

  • @Nicholasvelaz22
    @Nicholasvelaz22 Год назад

    Thanks, this was exactly what I was looking for in regards to the effects of depression and anxiety on attention and concentration. I've personally felt like I've literally become stupider as a result of chronic stress and subsequent "conversion" to more depressive symptoms. These symptoms of anxiety in my experience are under-appreciated despite their life-wrecking potential.

  • @malgorzatamaher9700
    @malgorzatamaher9700 2 года назад

    I can't seem to understand anything. I don't know why.

  • @MsBeachgirl10
    @MsBeachgirl10 2 года назад

    Can someone please explain this in a nutshell in layman's terms? I'm just an average person who does not have a doctorate in neurology or physiology.

    • @thanosisback2754
      @thanosisback2754 Год назад

      The kynurenine pathway (KP) is the NAD pathway. NAD is needed for energy in our cells. If the KP is working fine, then depression is kept in check. If not, you get depression. To avoid depression, we need tryptophan to be converted properly which culminates in NAD production. Tryptophan converts to serotonin. Serotonin is tied to long term happiness.

    • @criticadorauniversal
      @criticadorauniversal Год назад

      @@thanosisback2754 Well, all this is perfect, but if you have high levels of kynurenine and quinolinic, it seems that you have inflammation. If you reduce inflammation, you reduce kynurenine and therefore increase serotonin, why isn't inflammation reduced in medicine? What treatment is being offered today for this reduction?

  • @FlowerSan
    @FlowerSan 2 года назад

    What kind of PBM products look for? There are few products in China. If you want to see it, let me know it. Thank you for your lecture. Interesting and well done.

  • @alokvkulkarni
    @alokvkulkarni 2 года назад

    What a scintillating presentation by Dr. McIntyre!

  • @huelight6024
    @huelight6024 2 года назад

    I am the research director of a PBM product development and production company in Korea

  • @Texmatt21
    @Texmatt21 2 года назад

    I've noticed a vast improvement in my mental well-being with tdcs, particularly when combined with mindfulness meditation. Now I know why. I highly recommend tdcs for those who are suffering from depression. The literature supports its efficacy in many other areas, but it absolutely worked for my depression.

    • @craigm5713
      @craigm5713 2 года назад

      What montages or pad positions did u use?

    • @Karla-mu6hn
      @Karla-mu6hn 2 года назад

      So wonderful for you. Which device did you use?

    • @shenraine
      @shenraine Год назад

      Which device did you use?

  • @Decentralized_Maze
    @Decentralized_Maze 2 года назад

    Thank you. I've learned a significant amount in a short period of time. This video was packed full of helpful information, easy to understand, and I saved it to my channel for others to become familiar with.

  • @noxoloqwabe2414
    @noxoloqwabe2414 2 года назад

    0

  • @rxl2231
    @rxl2231 3 года назад

    thank you so much for sharing

  • @blast1one286
    @blast1one286 3 года назад

    Are there any developed specific medications currently for fkbp5 inhibition ? For example, I use SSRI's for a while, but I've done a genetic test, and it indicates that I double carry the high expressing risk variants of fkbp5.

    • @ETempleFitness
      @ETempleFitness Год назад

      I have that as well. Risk allele for Fkbp5. What have you found to help?

    • @blast1one286
      @blast1one286 Год назад

      @@ETempleFitness Nothing for this specifically. antidepressants (or some of them) increase glucocorticoid expression so it suppose to help with fkbp5 which repress those . But if you want to go with natural, I suggest ashwaganda ( in pill or powder form). It taste horrible but really decreases cortisol.

  • @serenitythroughdiscoveryho8448
    @serenitythroughdiscoveryho8448 3 года назад

    Bipolar 1. Thank you for this.

  • @serasvictoria6132
    @serasvictoria6132 3 года назад

    Just perfect.

  • @mohammadmasoumi272
    @mohammadmasoumi272 3 года назад

    How could be joint or participate in the study, e.g. materials science and engineering?

  • @dhardy6654
    @dhardy6654 3 года назад

    This is the 1st comment made on this video that has hung on youtube for 2 years. If you divide the 1700 views over the 24 months this means 70 people a month watch it. Dr Koob is the atop the pinicle of addiction science. How isn't everything he says flashed across very ones mind instantly as the most valuable and fresh data and Dr Koob can make the best conclusions. Something how recovery is done has to be wrong.... Elon Musk tweets a color and everyone knows it by the next day... What Dr Koob is explaining makes sense. It's our job to take Dr Koob's discoveries and use them to help people and relive them from suffering.

    • @manyahelman
      @manyahelman 2 года назад

      I love him! Note that his name is "book" spelled backwards...

  • @MoodMindMemory
    @MoodMindMemory 3 года назад

    Thank you for such amazing research! amazing and applicable from bench to bedside

  • @healingvalleyphysiotherapy8268
    @healingvalleyphysiotherapy8268 4 года назад

    👍

  • @margaretpeterson2239
    @margaretpeterson2239 4 года назад

    Congratulations to all.

  • @annewuwu
    @annewuwu 4 года назад

    Outstanding work! So timely and necessary.

  • @elisabrietzke
    @elisabrietzke 4 года назад

    Congrats, Roseli. Very nice RCT.

  • @stephantaylor3221
    @stephantaylor3221 4 года назад

    Nice study and nice presentation!

  • @calcal5135
    @calcal5135 4 года назад

    Did a single audience member question this erroneous use of the reciprocity theorem or this speaker’s misunderstanding of the EEG inverse problem? Sure would have been a nice talk IF IT WASN’T WRONG.

  • @calcal5135
    @calcal5135 4 года назад

    If you understood the basics of the ill-posed inverse problem of EEG you wouldn’t be making your BS claim that one can stimulate the EEG source by reciprocity.

    • @farcenter
      @farcenter 3 года назад

      I'm happy I'm not the only one who thought that seemed like a wild claim. How would someone even defend that claim? it doesn't make any sense. even if the the "inverse" of an EEG could cause depolarization, how could it find its what back to a point of origin, let alone preferenchly interact with specific neurotransmitters? Am I missing something? is this a main stream view in this literature? ah. sorry for the rant. is there's any legitimate literature on this, if so would love to hear of it! Cheers

    • @calcal5135
      @calcal5135 3 года назад

      @@farcenter You don’t have to go there (neuro transmitters etc). He simply misunderstands the reciprocity theorem and his claim about producing the same current density by tES as that which served as the source for the EEG electric field is just wrong wrong wrong. I never have liked the reciprocity theorem because it is misapplied so frequently. Regardless, the non uniqueness of the EEG inverse problem, which anyone in the field should be aware of, should have stopped him from making this wild claim. It appears he continues to do so albeit with not-so-clever rewording of his original claim. It took me all of 2 minutes to shoot down his wild claim when this work first appeared and so many thought it was so clever. It is appalling that reviewers, who would have spent hours reading and critiquing his work, missed the obvious. Peer review is a pile of dung.

    • @ShivaTD420
      @ShivaTD420 Год назад

      The signal travels through neurons that are already in action potential. Much like how electrons conduct through an arc, the ion channel depolarization forms a path of least resistance. The neurons ion channels activate in pulses, which cause oscillations. These waves are important as phase array based stimulation allows the equipment to create standing waves which are either in phase (amplification) or out of phase (interference). The depolarization of brain cells forms dipoles. The inverse problem was solved by bidomain and monodomain inverse operations in 2015.

    • @Tommy-lq2rk
      @Tommy-lq2rk Год назад

      ​@ShivaTD420 is there a Source for this? How can this even be allowed and marketed in the way it is. This is nothing other than strong magnetic fields aka brainsmog. And a lot of it which is really harmful

    • @ShivaTD420
      @ShivaTD420 Год назад

      @@Tommy-lq2rk well the research probably began as far back as electro shock therapy. Running a alternating electric current through the brain severed connections, this effect was done in hopes that bad connections that may be the source of the person's problems would be destroyed giving them some relief. This process was largely reserved for rare cases and the effects were somewhat unpredictable. Had lots of bad effects like memory and skill loss, personality changes , triggering catatonic states, seizures, comas. The second breakthrough was using DC current, but it was found that this couldn't penetrate into the brain very well, with most of the current flowing across the skin to the other electrode. As eeg technology improved brain mapping improved with it. Areas of the brain were charted. The third breakthrough was sampling different brain states by having the patient think about different things, stimulus and lack of stimulus and performing actions. Parts of the brain generate different signals during these tasks and these signals are recorded. The magnets and phased arrays would be the fourth breakthrough where it was found that the magnets allowed the DC signal to reach into the brain. Here it was found that brain cells in action potential formed a conductive path for the DC signal to travel down. Using phased arrays helped get a standing wave deeper into the brain. The recorded signals are usually used , so the brain is just getting samples of your own activity into areas of interest. The most recent breakthrough is that of using the optic nerve to reach deeper into the brain, accomplishing a deep brain stimulation effect similar to the implanted probes used to treat Parkinson's. This is all still heavily experimental research, there are only a handful of papers. While the field shows great promise I'm not sure how ones are marketing much claims to a end user aside from a possibility of relief with little known downsides, but this video is largely intended towards researchers, investors and entrepreneurs looking to buy into the technology. Magnetic fields by themselves shouldn't cause any issues. The magnetic fields in MRI scanners have Tesla values much higher than one would normally be exposed to throughout their lives, where brain activity is untouched. As for the DC currents, there could be risks but for now the therapeutic benefits seem to outweigh any risks. Very little data on adverse effects I have yet to witness any aside from temporary phosphines (geometric patterns in the vision similar to the optical effects seen when you close your eyes and press on them) when the rear of the brain is stimulated. I started in the field when this process was used mainly on people recovering from traumatic brain injuries and to halt seizures. But it has since expanded into other areas of mental illness. Some of these people have tried everything else and are desperate for some sort of relief even if it is placebo. While I wouldn't make any promises I can say it's largely low risk, low invasiveness and somewhat cheap vs things like surgical procedures or a lifetime on various medications that are almost as misunderstood as the diseases they treat, while they alter brain chemistry and the patient barrels towards tolerance of the compounds which result in higher doses or changing to other compounds with different modes of action, to keep up with the therapeutic benefits, but increasing the prevalence of unwanted side effects. We all have theories on how we think it works, but we are lacking on hard evidence somewhat related to the fact that some of the mechanics of how certain mental illnesses manifest are also largely not fully understood. Not sure if I can post links without this comment getting deleted but I'll direct you to some of the papers that demonstrate the action potentials becoming conductive paths with magnets helping guide phased array DC signals deeper into brain tissue, or the newer materials on the use of the optic nerve to attain a deep brain stimulation which seems to help Parkinson's. I will say I was highly skeptical of the tech initially, since I seen the effects that electroshock therapy had. My critical thinking had me cornered between how could such a low power DC signal make it into the brain at all as it would just travel across the skin to the other electrode rather then through the brain tissue, to if electrical current was strong enough to flow through the brain tissue it would cause damage like electro shock therapy did since you would need such a high current to overcome all the resistance of the body's structures.

  • @tjwukitsch6505
    @tjwukitsch6505 6 лет назад

    What an informative talk. Our lab uses a post-weaning social isolation model and I have always wondered how that compares to the maternal-separation model. I also wonder about the mechanisms behind the protective effects of post-weaning environmental enrichment. Are enriched environments acting on epigenetic mechanisms of different sets of genes that are responsible for lowing the likelihood of "bad" epigenetic changes like those implicated in neuropsychiatic disorders like addiction, depression, or PTSD? Or might the enriched environment be influencing the same sets of genes/their mechanisms of expression in different ways to make them somehow more resilient to their respective "bad" modifications? Thanks for the food for thought Dr. Nestler and SOBP!