Category: The Mind & Neuroscience

Healing the Addicted Brain with Dr. Hal Urschel December 15, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Hal Urschel

Addiction is a physical brain disease, not a failure of willpower. Dr. Hal Urschel, author of “Healing the Addicted Brain,” explains how alcohol and drugs injure the limbic system, why talk therapy alone fails, and how proper nutrition and extended sobriety can actually reverse the damage.

How Modern Messaging Changes Us December 10, 2009

Host: Armand DiMele

Armand DiMele traces how communication technologies from handwritten letters to cell phones have eroded intimacy and altered brain chemistry. Callers weigh in on texting at work, including a nurse whose story links phone distraction to a patient’s stroke.

Music Therapy and the Brain with Connie Tamiano December 9, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Connie Tamiano

Music reaches the brain in ways words cannot, and trained music therapist Connie Tamiano explains why. She and Armand discuss customizing song lists for dementia patients, how rhythm drives movement, and why watching rather than asking reveals how music affects someone you love.

Music Memory and the Brain December 3, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Connie Tameno, Imas, Jose, Marlon Sobel, Nsara, Stephanie D'Ambra

Memories shift each time we recall them, and music rewires brain chemistry in ways science is only beginning to confirm. Armand DiMele and co-host Stephanie D’Ambra, LCSW, draw on a recent conference on music and neurological function to explore how rhythm and melody can reach Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s patients, spark dopamine release, and even mirror the pull of addiction.

The Dopaminergic Mind with Dr. Fred Previck November 10, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Fred Previck

What made humans human? Dr. Fred Previck, MD, cognitive neuroscientist and author, argues that a dramatic expansion of dopamine in the brain drove our species to language, abstract thought, strategic planning, and civilization itself. Armand DiMele traces the arc from early hominids to modern society, asking whether our dopaminergic drive is now outpacing our wisdom.

How Moods Feed on Themselves October 13, 2009

Host: Armand DiMele

Moods are not simply feelings but products of neurotransmitters, nutrition, environment, and psychology working together. Armand DiMele argues that blame and repetitive arguing perpetuate bad moods rather than resolve them, and that a flexible, expansive mind, one open even to nonsense and surprise, is the real tool for change.

The Rhythms That Run Your Body September 30, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Sherri Siegel

Your heartbeat, digestion, sleep cycles, and mood are all governed by biological rhythms, and falling out of sync has real consequences. Armand DiMele and Dr. Sherry Siegel, M.D. explore cortisol, melatonin, the pineal gland, and what it means when two people’s rhythms simply don’t match.

The Social Rules of Manners and Etiquette September 23, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Sherri Siegel

Why do manners exist, who gets to have them, and what happens when the brain can no longer enforce them? Armand DiMele and Dr. Sherry Siegel, M.D. trace etiquette from dementia and autism to class inequality and road rage, arguing that good manners are ultimately a function of time, neurological capacity, and self-awareness.

The Migraine Brain with Dr. Carolyn Bernstein September 3, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Carolyn Bernstein, Sherri Siegel

Migraine is a disease, not just a bad headache. Armand and Dr. Sherry Siegel, M.D. are joined by neurologist Dr. Carolyn Bernstein, author of “The Migraine Brain,” to cover diagnostic criteria, weather and hormonal triggers, travel-related attacks, pain diaries, and why no universal cure exists.

The Nervous System and Hypochondria July 29, 2009

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Sherri Siegel

Fear of illness can be as debilitating as illness itself. Armand DiMele and Dr. Sherry Siegel, M.D. walk through common neurological symptoms people misread or obsess over, from vertigo and wide-based gait to hypochondriasis, including how caretaker dynamics and secondary gain keep health anxiety alive.