Brain Matters the Podcast

  • About
  • Meet the Team
  • Episodes
  • Listener Appreciation
  • Listener Survey
  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Send Us A Message
banner

Episode 30 - Molecular Manipulation of Mood with Dr. René Hen

On this episode of Brain Matters, Anthony and Dr. René Hen (Professor, Columbia University) talk about how mood and anxiety is regulated by serotonin and adult neurogenesis, and how Dr. Hen’s molecular tools have helped us understand how emotions are processed.

Today’s episode is brought to you by Audible.com. For a free audiobook, go to audiblepodcast.com/brainmatters

Music on today’s episode by Roulet, Revolution Void, and  2 8 1 4 

Listen and Subscribe on iTunes.

    • #neuroscience
    • #biology
    • #neurobiology
    • #science
    • #brain
    • #mood
    • #neurogenesis
    • #serotonin
    • #antidepressants
    • #ssri
    • #anxiety
    • #depression
    • #hen
    • #columbia
    • #episodes
  • 1 year ago
  • 4
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Episode 18 - The Negative Impacts of Stress with Dr. David Morilak

Is stress good or bad? Do the negative impacts of a stressful life outweight the benefits of the adaptive physiological response? Matt and Dr. David Morilak (Professor of Pharmacology, UT Health Science Center, San Antonio) talk about what defines a stress response and why we have them to begin with. We also find out if stress researchers have the secret to beating anxiety.

Thanks to Audible for supporting Brain Matters efforts in science outreach and education. Get a free audiobook of your choice at audiblepodcast.com/brainmatters.

Listen and Subscribe on iTunes.

    • #neuroscience
    • #biology
    • #psychology
    • #science
    • #stress
    • #research
    • #podcast
    • #audio
    • #episodes
    • #brainmatters
    • #anxiety
  • 2 years ago
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

The Scientific American Book of the Brain

Want to see the article that inspired our guest Marie Monfils to study fear memories? Read the article by Joseph LeDoux and maybe find some inspiration for yourself!

Despite millennia of preoccupation with every facet of human emotion, we are still far from explaining in a rigorous physiological sense this part of our mental experience.  Neuroscientists have, in modern times, been especially concerned with the neural basis of cognitive processes such as perception and memory. They have for the most part ignored the brain’s role in emotion.

Yet in recent years, interest in this mysterious mental terrain has surged. Catalyzed by breakthroughs in understanding the neural basis of cognition and by an increasingly sophisticated knowledge of the anatomical organization and physiology of the brain, investigators have begun to tackle the problem of emotion. One quite rewarding area of research has been the inquiry into the relation between memory and emotion. Much of this examination has involved studies of one particular emotion -fear- and the manner in which specific events or stimuli come, through individual learning experiences, to evoke this state. Scientists, myself included, have been able to determine the way in which the brain shapes how we form memories about this basic, but significant, emotional event. We call this process “emotional memory." By uncovering the neural pathways through which a situation causes a creature to learn about fear, we hope to elucidate the general mechanisms of this form of memory. Because many human mental disorders- including anxiety, phobia, post-traumatic stress syndrome and panic attack- involve malfunctions in the brain’s ability to control fear, studies of the neural basis of this emotion may help us further understand and treat these disturbances.

    • #Neuroscience
    • #science
    • #brain
    • #brainmatters
    • #podcast
    • #emotion
    • #cognition
    • #anxiety
    • #perception
    • #memory
    • #biology
  • 3 years ago
  • 1
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Brain Matters is a podcast where real neuroscientists sit down and talk about the brain. Sit in on conversations between scientists you've never had the chance to hear before.
Brain Matters is produced by neuroscience graduate students at The University of Texas at Austin.

Support

We work hard to bring you Brain Matters for free. If you'd like to support our show click through this amazon link and shop as you normally would.

You can also donate directly through PayPal:

Contact Us

Have a question, comment, or suggestion? Interested in being a guest or advertising with us? Email us at:

[email protected]

  • @BrainPodcast on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile

Twitter

loading tweets…

Top

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Send Us A Message
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union