Category Archives: neuroscience

When Violence is Persuasive

I was glad to turn on the radio and hear Gabrielle Giffords has weighed in on the gun issue currently consuming news reports in North America. Giffords, a Democratic congresswoman, was shot in the head at close range on January … Continue reading

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Poor Science Supports Media Effects

Most of us think we’re experts on media. And one reason is we believe seeing is believing. Take violence, for example. Parents, teachers, psychologists, physicians—loads of folks–assume that what we see on television and in movies influences us.

Posted in Native Science, neuroscience, news bias, science, science communication, social media, writing | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Neuroscience: Le Mot du Jour

David Eagleman’s talk last evening engendered many comments around the supper table about neuroscience. Like soup du jour, neuroscience is le mot du jour (the word of the day). Neuroscience clings to the headlines like a bear to honey.

Posted in american indian, journalism, native american, Native Science, neuroscience, news bias, Osage, science, science communication | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

We Want it Now

You could distill last night’s lecture into one phrase: Wait for it. Neuroscientist David Eagleman gave a public lecture in Portland on how to better manage the angel and devil on your shoulder when you’re trying to lost weight, quit … Continue reading

Posted in american indian, ethics, health, Indian, native american, Native Science, neuroscience, science, science communication | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments