Category: The Mind & Neuroscience

How Fear Miscalculates Risk January 16, 2008

Host: Armand DiMele

Fear is not irrational; it is a lightning-fast risk assessment run by the reptilian brain, and that system makes predictable errors. Armand DiMele explains why people fear planes but not cars, ignore slow-building dangers like smoking, and grow reckless when they feel protected. Callers connect the science to their own lives, including one woman whose fear of water traces back to childhood beatings and dissociation.

Fear Conditioning and the Dentist November 15, 2007

Host: Armand DiMele

Why do so many people dread the dentist? Armand DiMele uses dental fear as a window into how the brain wires pain to neutral stimuli, how that wiring buries itself under layers of displacement, and how extinction learning and reward associations can undo it.

Living with Chronic Pain November 7, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Jonna Valerio

Pain is invisible, subjective, and often disbelieved, yet it reshapes lives. Armand DiMele and studio guest Jonna Valerio examine the biology of chronic pain, the psychology of how it persists after injury heals, and how loved ones can offer genuine support without hollow advice.

How Memory Shapes Who We Love September 26, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Patti

Why do we fall in love with the person we do? Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Patti dig into the neuroscience of early memory, tracing how the amygdala and hippocampus shape unconscious attraction long before we can consciously recall anything, and why no rational checklist can fully explain who we end up loving.

How Emotion Shapes Memory September 19, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atti

Memory is not just repetition but emotion: the stronger the feeling, the deeper the imprint. Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti trace memory from DNA and evolutionary survival through neuroplasticity, PTSD, and the chemical trio of acetylcholine, dopamine, and norepinephrine, showing why stuck emotions block us from moving on.

Cancer, Oxygen and Toxic Conditions with Dr. Majid Ali September 11, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Dr. Majid Ali

Dr. Majid Ali, Physician, presents his framework for understanding cancer through three root causes: toxic foods, toxic environment, and toxic thoughts. Broadcast on the anniversary of 9/11, this expanded WBAI fundraising edition covers enzyme therapies, bowel and liver detox, and the case for patient self-education as a counterweight to fear.

Sleep Sex and Human Difference September 6, 2007

Host: Armand DiMele

Every person’s inner life is radically different, and sleep is where that strangeness shows most clearly. Armand DiMele moves from the diversity of human experience into the territory of sexomnia, narcoleptic false memories of childhood assault, and Ambien’s surprising links to hypersexuality and compulsive night eating.

Hormones Running Your Life September 4, 2007

Host: Armand DiMele

Prolactin, dopamine, and serotonin shape your mood, sex drive, and sleep far more than your conscious choices do. Armand DiMele explains how post-orgasmic prolactin surge explains the sleep-after-sex dynamic, why falling asleep to a flashing TV rewires your brain, and how sugar sabotages rest. Caller Adam’s relationship tension brings the biochemistry home.

The Joy of Curiosity August 22, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Roberta Maria Atti

Curiosity is a survival skill. Armand DiMele and co-host Roberta Maria Atti use a near-fatal drug interaction between Effexor and triptans to argue that patients who research their own conditions protect themselves in ways that physicians and pharmacies often fail to. The conversation ranges from mold under a microscope to the mechanics of serotonin reuptake inhibitors.

The Burning Brain of OCD August 9, 2007

Host: Armand DiMeleGuests: Stephanie D'Ambra

OCD is a physical brain disorder, not just a behavioral one. Armand DiMele and Stephanie D’Ambra, LCSW, examine the neural circuitry behind obsessive loops, explain why stuck thought patterns generate what Armand calls “brain burn,” and offer practical strategies for manually shifting gears to break the cycle.