Boosting Your Brain With Batteries 81
Bifurcati writes "Running a tiny current acrosss your head increases your verbal skills reports Nature News. 103 nervous volunteers received 2 thousandths of an amp and showed a 20% improval in a simple verbal test, compared to a control group (same setup, just no current in the wires). Somebody better buy the politicians a couple of car batteries..."
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
I'm sceptical (Score:3, Insightful)
Oops (Score:2)
Re:Oops (Score:2)
2 1/1000 of an amp... That's 0.002 amps.
Re:Oops (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Oops (Score:1)
Re:Oops (Score:4, Insightful)
If the effect is psychological, having a physically detectable (by the subject) component is likely to reinforce it.
New Idea (Score:4, Funny)
If the effect is psychological, having a physically detectable (by the subject) component is likely to reinforce it.
Hmm, so maybe to increase my verbal skills I should rub poison ivy on my skalp replicate the ichy sensation.
Re:Oops (Score:2)
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:3, Informative)
Presumably to get this study printed in a reputable journal they would have to reach a resonable standard of experimentation, which would require double-blind testing?
Awesome. (Score:5, Funny)
But .... (Score:2)
But the research on the water-cooled tinfoil-hat hasn't caught up yet. What are we supposed to do in the mean-time?
=)
Re:But .... (Score:2)
Re:But .... (Score:4, Funny)
I do that now. That's why I need the overclocking.
Re:Bush (Score:4, Funny)
You misspelled "nucular".
Re:Bush (Score:1)
Burn Out (Score:5, Interesting)
What happens when you up the voltage on your CPU? That bathtub curve becomes a lot shorter in timespan.
Hope the same doesn't happen with your brain.
Does that mean (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Does that mean (Score:2)
Yeah, but (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, but (Score:3, Funny)
Would these be the same people who are day-in-day-out jamming an external current across their brains?
Thought not. :-P
Re:Yeah, but (Score:2)
Bruce Lee?
Re:Yeah, but (Score:2)
Re:Does that mean (Score:1)
Re:Does that mean (Score:1)
Re:Does that mean (Score:2)
Crispin
Re:Does that mean (Score:2)
Since death is defined as brain death, all of them; by definition :-)
I applied voltage to my brain... (Score:3, Funny)
"Improval"?! (Score:1)
Mystery Solved (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mystery Solved (Score:2)
Re:Mystery Solved (Score:2)
Venkman: Egon, do you remember the time you tried to drill a hole in your head?
Spengler: That would've worked if you hadn't stopped me.
Re:Mystery Solved (Score:3, Funny)
A brain?
-
Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain letter (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyway she reports a 20% increase. Hmm, if I get my math right that mean they got 24 words in 90 seconds?
Now it all depends on how the results were calculated. It obviously had some kind of effect if EVERYONE who had the current did 20% better then those who didn't. But this is never the case. Not everyone without the current would have gotten 20. Some would have gotten 16, some 24. Same with the current applied.
The study is far to small and inprecise. We are only talking a few words more. Because the subjects who received the current knew it (they reported an icchy feeling) the test is not really blind as these test need to be. That might have inspired them to do better.
If the same can be done with more complex language tests then it could prove that something is happening here other then the placebo effect.
Anyway I am the kind of person who always gets electric/static shocks from everything, by this logic I should be a language genius. I am not.
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:2)
Not really. For one thing, static shocks probably wouldn't go through your brain (unless you have the habit of ramming your head against metal objects). And even if it did, it would only mean that you should be smarter with language than if you had never received those shocks -- it says nothing about how smart you would be relative to the general population. The study also d
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:1)
Exhibit D: All Small Furry Creatures encountered thus far have been linguistically challenged. Including the one strolling around my legs right now in an 8-form.
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:2)
What is an 8-form?
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:1)
Your second point is valid though. I was talking about my cat, but it should be "figure eight" or "figure of eight" in English. I think my native language is showing through... Consider me arrested, supreme officer!
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:2)
I, speaking practically no languages other than English, am not prone to correct errors which are clearly due to a non-native-English-speaker's unfamiliarity with English idiom - especially American idiom. I mostly wondered what you meant with the 8 thing.
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:2)
To = too
Inprecise = Imprecise
Icchy = itchy
Hmm...
Anyway I am the kind of person who always gets electric/static shocks from everything
That explains a lot!
Re:Lets see 20 words beginning with a certain lett (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, that could mean that they all just did better the second time. That's why the author of the paper split them into two groups, a zapped group and a control group. With 50 people, you're still working with a large enough sample to get useful averages as indicators, though not proof. And what did she discover? The zapped group did twenty percent better than the control group. If the control group showed NO improvement, they'd have 1000 words total, and the zapped group would have 1200 words.
Placebo effect is rather far-fetched here. Yes, the zapped people did feel an itchy feeling, but both groups had electrodes and believed they'd be zapped. The real zappees performed much much better than their counterparts.
What bothers me most about your post is that you're ripping her study apart because it's not absolute proof. Of course it isn't. It's a study. All science is looking at indicators, trends, probabilities, hypotheses... and it's totally counter-productive to wait until you've proven it outright. What you should be saying is, "Hmm... that's really interesting that she reported such a large improvement, and her results definitely indicate something curious going on. Perhaps this deserves a closer look."
If you're going to attack studies and reports, people, make sure you have the credentials and expertise to do so. Usually if somebody is publishing in or being reported on by Nature, they've got their ducks in a row, and your 2-minute armchair critique is going to fall hopelessly flat. Ask questions, offer insights, but criticism comes best from peers, which most of us are not.
How to get people to talk... (Score:2)
We found that by applying electricity liberally across thier temples and genitals gave us a 100% increase in talkativeness and convictions.
If they loose control of thier bodily functions, it is best to stop, or lower the voltage.
To get verbal + math enhancement (Score:5, Funny)
Same reason why processors need more juice. (Score:2)
Re:Same reason why processors need more juice. (Score:1)
nice (Score:3, Funny)
Extra Alien protection! (Score:1)
Double benifit!!!!
Obligatory Real Genius Quote (Score:2)
Increasing evidence of biologic effect (Score:3, Interesting)
There's some evidence [yorkregion.com] that shows there's an association with cancer and some evidence that shows that it's perfectly safe. Long time cell phone users appear to be at risk [usatoday.com] for benign tumors. Now this study shows there's a possibly beneficial effect.
Personally, the idea that there's any effect at all makes me somewhat nervous. I spend eight hours a day a couple feet away from EMF generators, as do most of the Slashdot crowd. Knowing that my computers might be tweaking my neurons or altering my DNA, however slightly, doesn't exactly fill me with glee.
Improval? (Score:1)
Re:Improval? (Score:2)
Up the dosage Nurse Ratched! (Score:4, Funny)
Improval (Score:3)
STOP EVERYONE!!! (Score:3, Funny)
All the while if you really apply current to your hat they will use specially crafted rays to go through that current to your brain, or the higher tech greys can even wirelessly ride in via the magnetic field which will now surround the hat when current is applied.
I'm warning you, don't do it or YOU could end up being the next president or some other puppetlike official!
details details!! (Score:2)
Will it be alright to pulse this through my head for a millisecond every second? Doesn't that sound like it would give you a longer, more continuous effect? I mean, I've got a AA battery sitting here in front of me that's good for 2010mAh. If I ran a constant 2mA through my head I cou
Bwahahah (Score:2)
Yeth marthter.
BWAM! Fzzzt. Zk fzzsnk bzz
Eeet leeves. Leeeeeves! Hahahahahaha eee hehehehe. LEEEVES!
Modern science, eh? They should have just hired the guys at Hammer Horror. Been doing this sort of stuff for years, now.
The true "science" behind it... (Score:3, Funny)
(**ZAP**)
"Owww. Sorry, I'll do better, I promise, stop zapping me"
(**ZAP**)
"Sorry, sorry, I'll go faster"
(**ZAP**)
Previous Tests (Score:4, Funny)
It works in reverse too... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Polarity (Score:2)
Did a person improve or just the average? (Score:2)
Somebody should mock up a circuit for this (Score:2, Interesting)
Innumeracy is rampant (Score:2)