Showing posts with label Psychology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psychology. Show all posts

1/25/2010

Review of A User's Guide to the Brain: Perception, Attention, and the Four Theaters of the Brain (Paperback)

"Mental problems, from hot temper to laziness, from chronic worry to excessive drinking, all have roots in the biology of the brain." (p. 357)

This is a report on a revolution taking place in neuroscience, psychiatry, psychology and kindred disciplines.The old paradigms are crumbling under the onslaught of a new understanding of how the brain really works.Harvard Medical School psychiatrist John J. Ratey's "guide" (it's more than that) is an admirable exercise in bringing us up to date on what is happening in brain science--what we suspect, what we know, and how this knowledge is affecting clinical practice.

In a sense Ratey's book is a report on a new paradigm.It is biology-based and relies first and foremost on the physiology of the brain and body as they have developed over time.Gone are the artificial constructs of Freudian psychology and the very limited black-box psychology of behaviorism.The new psychology is based on opening that black box and looking inside.Of course what we find there is enormously complex, and we are, to use Ratey's expression (p. 124), "still on the first step of a very long staircase."Yet, because of the growing power of neuroscience to study and access the living brain in ways that were impossible just a few years ago, we are entering an exciting time, full of hope and wonder.

As Dr. Ratey explains in "Acknowledgments," this book began as a cooperative research effort by many people toward writing a "primer on the brain for mental health professionals."Then it was suggested by Pantheon editor Linda Healey that a smaller version "that would try to instruct the public at large" be written.A professional science writer, Mark Fischetti, was hired and schooled.The result is a book written in an engaging and very readable manner.However, its organization--neat and reasonable as it is--actually detracts from the book's effectiveness because the most interesting and helpful chapters are near the end. I realize that Ratey and his editors and writers came to the conclusion that the material in the last three chapters, "The Social Brain," "The Four Theaters," and "Care and Feeding" could be better appreciated after having read the more fundamental material in the first seven chapters.Nonetheless I believe that a lot of people who would benefit from this very fine book will not get to those chapters.Too bad.Ratey's metaphor of the four theaters is a powerful tool for incorporating and understanding the new paradigm, while the final chapter gives us some very excellent advice on how to live fully while keeping the brain and our systems healthy.

Consequently I would propose that when Dr. Ratey updates this book (and I hope he will; there is so much happening in neuroscience that some of the information here will be dated in just a few years) that he structure the book so that it begins with Chapter 9, "The Four Theaters," followed by Chapter 8, "The Social Brain," and then the first seven chapters, concluding with the advice in Chapter 10, "Care and Feeding."For the reader, I recommend reading Chapter 9 first so that you can immediately share in the excitement that is at the heart of the book.

The "theaters," by the way, should be understood as "theaters of operations" and not theaters where movies might be shown.(Originally Ratey had used "kingdoms of the brain" as his metaphor.)The theaters are (1) perception; (2) attention, consciousness and cognition; (3) brain function (memory, emotion, movement, etc.); and (4) behavior and identity.He sees a flow of consequence (like a river) from perception to attention to function to behavior.He argues persuasively that the brain is a holistically operating entity that is constantly being changed by its interaction with the environment, a dynamic organism that is forever learning, making new perceptions and adjustments.Things can go wrong in any one of the theaters and what happens in any theater affects the other theaters down river (and even up river).What I found particularly interesting is the new approach to diagnostics and therapy this understanding affords.A good example is on pages 347-349 where Ratey tells the story of Theresa who was slow to learn, unsocial and awkward in sports.Instead of some disorder out of DSM-IV being plastered on her forehead, Ratey found that she had a perception problem, and he demonstrated how her social and functional problems stemmed from that "first theater" problem.Ratey emphasizes freeing the patient from self-doubt and personal blame for whatever the problem may be, and always looks for a biological cause first. Some bits of wisdom from the best chapter in the book, from pages 353-355:

"Modern medical practice tends to regard patients' self-evaluations as too tainted by subjectivity, but this is a grave error."

"It is quite beyond the average patient's ability, within the framework of...insight-oriented therapies, to pinpoint the true source of unhappiness and frustration."

"Prozac is hardly a remedy for the self-blame, lost opportunities, and intellectual insecurity of a lifetime compromised by unrecognized perceptual and cognitive deficits."

"We have to begin to think of the brain as a self-organizing ecosystem, one of such staggering complexity and delicate balance that almost any aspect of a patient's life may be relevant to a diagnosis or essential to treatment."

"[T]he clinician's duty...includes devoting more time to looking for what is good in patients' lives, for the strengths and talents that are not yet being fully realized, and for the secret pleasures and sources of happiness that they have never allowed themselves."

"We in psychiatry continually risk mistaking our labels for the disorders themselves."

"The brain's processes can be utterly transformed by self-discovery and the right pursuits in life."



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1/22/2010

Review of i before e (except after c) (Hardcover)

I am a home schooler, and the memory tips in this little book are invaluable teaching tools. Some I remembered, some I had forgotten...and some were new to me. All can serve anyone on "memory lane." It even helped me come up with memory keys on my own. Great book, and an easy read.

Product Description
Here is an amusing collection of ingenious mnemonics devised to help us learn and understand hundreds of important fact as children and can continue to resonate with us as adults.

Featuring all the mnemonics youÂ'll ever need to know, this fun little book will bring back all the simple, easy-to-remember rhymes from your childhoodÂ-once learned, fix the information in the brain foreverÂ-such as learning to count by reciting Â'One, Two, buckle my shoe, Three, Four, knock at the door.Â' Packed with clever verses, engaging acronyms, curiousÂ-and sometimes hilariousÂ-sayings that can be used to solve a problem or cap an argument.

Take a trip back to the classroom, and rediscover the assortment of practical memory aids covering a range of different subjects, including spelling, time, mathematics, history, general trivia, and much more. The information is organized in short snippets by category such as:
*Geographically Speaking:Remember North East South West by reciting Never Eat Slimy Worms or Naughty Elephants Squirt Water.
*Time and the Calendar: Â'Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November; All the rest have 31 excepting February alone; And that has 28 days clear; With 29 in each leap yearÂ'
*Think of a Number: Know the Roman numerals by remembering Â'I Value Xylophones Like Cows Dig MilkÂ'
*World History: Â'In fourteen hundred, ninety-two, Columbus sailed the ocean blue, And found this land, land of the Free, beloved by you, beloved by meÂ'

The clever verses, engaging acronyms, curious sayings are endless. Guaranteed to amuse and inform, here is a perfect gift for any language loverÂ-complete with a To/From gift plate.



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12/04/2009

Review of ADHD: A Path to Success: A Revolutionary Theory and New Innovation in Drug-Free Therapy (Paperback)

reviews were excellent, so I bought the book.During the first 50 pages I almost regretted it.It reads like an extended advertisement for Dr. Weathers' practice in Spokane, WA.Most off-putting is his term "CAER" for the machine in which he performs most of his therapy.It took until page 221 to find out what a CAER machine really did, and I was SO relieved.It is a mostly automated way to do EMDR, which stands for Eye Movement Desensitization/ Reprogramming, a fifteen-year old method of reducing affect about specific events.EMDR is a proven methodology.Anybody can do it given a little training, although you may not know this from reading the book.Most important, the book has tremendous scope, dealing with the complex causes and possible cures of ADHD in an understandable and comprehensive way. By the way, the patents on his CAER machine are 5,219,322 and 5,725,472 which are good reading if you are a geek.

Product Description
May,2000 treatment follow-up study shows that 92% of families rate treatment as Successful or Very Successful. See "Publisher's Comments" section below for more details.

Most books on adhd rehash the same worn out theories and treatments. Instead, ADHD: A Path to Success offers a newperspective on ADHD that makes sense with your own personal experience. - it is not a deficit, defect or neurological disorder.

- it is a highly refined, short-term coping skill that backfires.

- takes it out of the realm of medical mystery and psychobabble.

- describes anew, no drug, no diet, no nonsense, patented treatment technology.

You can only help your child when you understand their experience through their eyes. The engaging story of Dr. Weathers personal struggle and conquest ofattention deficit disorder is chronicled. He explains your child's experience of attention deficit disorder as they live it, rather than how adults think about it. Once you understand attention deficit disorder from your child's point of view, you have taken an essential step to helping him solve his problem.Instead of just seeing attention deficit disorder as a problem you will learn how it "works" for your child. It makes his life easier on the moment to moment basis, even though it causes problems in the long run. With this new perspective you can look at your child's behavior in a more positive light and react in a more helpful manner.It is easy reading designed for parents as well as professionals. Many case studies and concrete examples of effective strategies are provided.

From the Publisher
ADHD Treatment Follow-Up Study: May, 2000

Even though, after treating ADHD children and their families for years it was clear that CAER treatment was very effective; it was finally time to do a systematic quantitative follow-up study. The results strongly support my clinical impression that CAER makes dramatic improvements in all aspects of the constellation of symptoms comprising ADHD/ADD, without the use of medications. It should be noted that these are some of the most difficult ADHD children around. Parents don't spend the time and money to fly to Spokane until they have exhausted all closer and cheaper alternatives.

Over the last 2 years (98, 99) I saw 74 children, and their families, who could be clearly diagnosed as ADHD/ADD. Their ages ranged from 6 to 17 years. Seventysixpercent were males the balance females. Ninety six percent had previously been treated with psychotropic medications, such as Ritalin, Cylert, Adderall, Dexedrine, Chlonadine, Paxil, etc.

We were able to contact 49parents by telephone to administer a short questionnaire about the effects of CAER treatment on their ADHD/ADD child. To avoid a short-term placebo or honey-moon-effect, only families 6 months or more post-treatment were contacted. All families were treated with three multi-hour intensive treatment sessions over three days.

Overall results were:

86%rated it as Very Effective 6% rated it as Effective 8% rated it as No DifferentNone rated it as harmful.

None of the children in the Very Effective or Effective categories had been placed on psychotropic medications. Of the children rated No difference, 58% in that category had been placed on psychotropic medications, with mixed effectiveness.

Behavior Change At Home:

81% rated their child's behavior as Much Better11% rated their child's behavior as Better8% rated their child's behavior as No DifferentNone rated it as harmful

Behavior Change At School:

76% rated their child's behavior as Much Better13% rated their child's behavior as Better11% rated their child's behavior as No DifferentNone rated it as harmful

Change in Grades:

74% rated their child's grades as Much Better15% rated their child's grades as Better11% rated their child's grades as No DifferentNone felt that their child's grades were worse as a result of treatment



Click Here to see more reviews about: ADHD: A Path to Success: A Revolutionary Theory and New Innovation in Drug-Free Therapy (Paperback)

11/28/2009

Review of Home Is Where We Start From: Essays by a Psychoanalyst (Paperback)

These essays were collected and published posthumously, by Winnicott's widow, Clare, and colleagues. British pediatrician, humanitarian, andground-breaking psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott died in 1971, having made anearly immeasurable contribution to the fields of psychoanalysis and childpsychology. In this volume, as with his other writings, his ideas are deep,reverential and respectful, and often somewhat complex, and at the sametime, his presentation is utterly simple and straightforward. The reader isfully engaged, as a result of Winnicott's incredible knack for connectingwith his audience.

The lively and interesting papers comprising thisutterly accessible collection were written over a wide span of time - threedecades or more. The selections are varied, and have been separated forreaderly convenience into several sections: "Health and Illness,""The Family," and, finally, "Reflections on Society."Some were written in order to be presented at meetings of the medicaland/or psychoanalytic community; others, to various civic, political, andother groups (The Progressive League, The Liberal Magazine, The BorstalAssistant Governors' Conference, etc.)

The collection is various andinteresting for its content but also for - not in spite of - its grab-bagfeel. Winnicott was comfortable with his listeners, and never afraid tospeak simply, clearly, and with his trademark empathy intact. In fact, thatempathy was at the core of his work. There's a great variety in it, too."The Price of Disregarding Psychoanalytic Research," a talk givenin 1965, details the importance of his philosophy. ("The link betweenpoetic truth and scientific truth is surely in the person, in you andme.") Essays such as the 1963 "The Value of Depression"("Always, depression implies ego strength...") and the 1967"Delinquency as a Sign of Hope" ("the antisocial tendency islinked inherently with deprivation" ) show Winnicott at his very best.And the playful and kind 1969 "The Pill and the Moon" - writtenfor an address to the Progressive League in the 1960's - iswonderful.

Some of these hopeful and kindhearted essays show their age,but in a welcome and lovely way, and therefore each is well worth readingand thinking about.

Product Description
One of the most gifted and creative psychoanalysts of his generation, D. W. Winnicott made lasting contributions to our understanding of the minds of children.His ideas have influenced the diverse psychoanalytic schools of Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, and Hans Kohut. But his reach extends far beyond professional circles: his talks to general audiences over the years won him enormous numbers of followers among parents and teachers who have found his observations rich in penetrating insight.

This collection brings together many of Winnicott's most important pieces, including previously unpublished talks and several essays from books and journals now difficult to obtain. They range widely in topic—from "The Concept of a Healthy Individual" and "The Value of Depression" to "Delinquency as a Sign of Hope"—and elucidate some of Winnicott's seminal ideas, such as the "transitional object" and the concept of false self. All convey Winnicott's vision of the ways in which the developing self interacts with the family and the larger society. .



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11/03/2009

Review of The Forsaken Child: Essays on Group Care and Individual Therapy (Hardcover)

The essays presented thoughtfully by Dr. Zimmerman are essential readings for anyone interested in residential care.Zimmerman poignantly details the attainable progress achieved by children diagnosed with primary attachment disorders.His desire to understand rather than judge these children fosters a loving and structured environment enabling psychological progress in terms of autonomy and social acceptance.Zimmerman's ability to relate theory to practical interventions makes The Forsaken Child a book to be kept toward the front of the shelf.

Product Description
In this era of budget constraints and the application of increasingly time-limited models of residential treatment, The Forsaken Child, containing essays on the delivery of group care and individual treatment services for young people present an argument for the preservation of thoughtful, humanistic forms of residential care. With The Forsaken Child, you will gain a more refined understanding of the concepts of milieu treatment, the present-day challenges of managed care, and the development of contemporary techniques in psychoanalysis and dynamic psychotherapy.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Forsaken Child: Essays on Group Care and Individual Therapy (Hardcover)

9/25/2009

Review of Eldercare for Dummies (Paperback)

I recently met Rachelle at a healthcare meeting and was fasinated after hearing she had written her book.As an owner of a "free" senior placement service, I was anxious to read it and see how else I could advise my clients on such tough matters as eldercare. The book is with me wherever I go. Over the holidays I found myself counseling my own family members on how to talk to their in-laws when they begin to notice the ever changing physical events in their lives.I've only started, so there is so much more to learn.In the meantime, I never open the book without a highlighter in hand.Many thanks Rachelle!

Product Description
Cope with legal, financial, and medical issues

Minimize anxiety and stress and make the later years golden

Need help caring for an elderly loved one? This sensitive, reassuring guide provides strategies for assessing older persons' needs, arranging for care, ensuring their safety, and enhancing quality of life - all while respecting their dignity. You'll see how to manage physical disabilities and chronic health problems, evaluate nursing homes, and help elders control their destinies.

The Dummies Way

  • Explanations in plain English
  • "Get in, get out" information
  • Icons and other navigational aids
  • Tear-out cheat sheet
  • Top ten lists
  • A dash of humor and fun


From the Back Cover
Cope with legal, financial, and medical issues

Minimize anxiety and stress and make the later years golden

Need help caring for an elderly loved one? This sensitive, reassuring guide provides strategies for assessing older persons' needs, arranging for care, ensuring their safety, and enhancing quality of life - all while respecting their dignity. You'll see how to manage physical disabilities and chronic health problems, evaluate nursing homes, and help elders control their destinies.

The Dummies Way

  • Explanations in plain English
  • "Get in, get out" information
  • Icons and other navigational aids
  • Tear-out cheat sheet
  • Top ten lists
  • A dash of humor and fun




Click Here to see more reviews about: Eldercare for Dummies (Paperback)