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PET imaging focuses on medication's purported ability to improve mental performance
June 17, 2008
Popular stimulant's role in brain function deterioration is cause for concern, according to researchers at SNM's 55th Annual Meeting, June 14-18 New Orleans, La.-Concerned by the growing numbers of people using stimulant medications such as methylphenidate (MP)-either legally or illegally-to improve attention and focus, researchers used positron emission tomography (PET) imaging with the radiotracer fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) to assess the effects of the drug on brain function in the normal human brain.
"MP is often prescribed appropriately for individuals with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), who are unable to focus their minds in order to perform everyday tasks," said Nora Volkow, M.D., director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse in Bethesda, Md. "We wanted to better understand how the drug works in 'normal, healthy' people when they are performing a cognitive task, as well as when they are not."
The study comprised 23 healthy adults, who were tested at baseline and while performing an accuracy-controlled cognitive task (numerical calculations) and also when viewing cards with nature scenes. Participants were imaged both before and after receiving an oral dosage of 20 milligrams of MP. The PET FDG scans showed a significant increase in regional brain glucose utilization when subjects performed the cognitive task, but the increases were significantly greater when they did the task while on placebo as opposed to when they did the task while on MP. The increases in brain glucose metabolism induced by the task were almost 50 percent lower when they were performed with MP than with the placebo. In contrast, when MP was given in a neutral condition (no cognitive task), brain glucose utilization did not change, indicating that its effects are dependent on the context of administration.
"The brain uses glucose as the main source of energy and increases its utilization in proportion to the level of activity. Therefore, the decrease in the amount of glucose required by the brain to perform the cognitive task with MP suggests that one of MP's mechanisms is to make the brain more efficient," said Volkow.
The researchers noted that in those individuals who performed well without the stimulant, MP improved performance, whereas in those who performed poorly without medication (who were given a placebo), their performance deteriorated further upon receiving the drug.
"The data suggest that the effects of MP are dependent on the individual's performance, and since people take these medications in order to improve performance, they need to recognize that for some, performance will deteriorate," said Volkow.
In addition to deterioration of brain function efficiency, Volkow pointed out that inappropriate usage of these stimulants could lead to addiction. "While MP increased some participants' ability to focus on a task, use of stimulant medications outside of their intended clinical applications could result not only in deterioration of performance, but also in addiction."
MP is a central nervous system stimulant. It has effects similar to, but more potent than, caffeine and less potent than amphetamines. It has a notably calming and "focusing" effect on those with ADHD. ADHD consists of a persistent pattern of abnormally high levels of activity, impulsivity, and/or inattention that is more frequently displayed and more severe than is typically observed in individuals with comparable levels of development. Most symptoms improve during adolescence or adulthood, but the disorder can persist or present in adults. Methylphenidate also is occasionally prescribed for treating narcolepsy.
Because stimulant medicines such as MP do have potential for abuse, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has placed stringent, Schedule II controls on their manufacture, distribution and prescription. For example, DEA requires special licenses for these activities, and prescription refills are not allowed. Individual states may impose further regulations, such as limiting the number of dosage units per prescription.
Society of Nuclear Medicine
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Related Cognitive Task Current Events and Cognitive Task News Articles Cognitive Task Current Events and Cognitive Task News RSS Rough day at work? You won't feel like exercising Have you ever sat down to work on a crossword puzzle only to find that afterwards you haven't the energy to exercise? Or have you come home from a rough day at the office with no energy to go for a run?
Gene predicts how brain responds to fatigue, human study shows New imaging research in the June 24 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience helps explain why sleep deprivation affects some people more than others.
Brain's organization switches as children become adults Any child confronting an outraged parent demanding to know "What were you thinking?" now has a new response: "Scientists have discovered that my brain is organized differently than yours."
Musicians use both sides of their brains more frequently than average people Supporting what many of us who are not musically talented have often felt, new research reveals that trained musicians really do think differently than the rest of us.
Coke or Pepsi? Being distracted can make you more susceptible to ads A can of Coke next to the word "awesome"; a can of Pepsi next to a picture of a happy couple. Seem too basic to be effective advertising" Prior research has shown that reported attitudes towards brands are not affected by such simple juxtapositions.
Improving quality of life for brain tumour patients A new neuroimaging study at the Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital at McGill University aims to ensure the highest quality of life for patients by assessing their cognitive skills before, during, and after brain tumour surgery.
Brain network linked to contemplation in adults is less complex in children A brain network linked to introspective tasks -- such as forming the self-image or understanding the motivations of others -- is less intricate and well-connected in children, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have learned.
New clinical data shows chromium picolinate improves cognitive function Nutrition 21, Inc. (NASDAQ: NXXI), a leading developer and marketer of chromium-based and omega-3 fish oil-based nutritional supplements, today announced the results of a clinical study that showed daily supplementation with 1000 mcg of chromium as chromium picolinate improved cognitive function in older adults experiencing early memory decline. The results of the randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study were presented to the medical community at a neurological meeting.
Carnegie Mellon neuroscientist proposes new theory of brain flexibility Carnegie Mellon University neuroscientist Marcel Just and Stanford postdoctoral fellow Sashank Varma have put forward a new computational theory of brain function that provides answers to one of the central questions of modern science: How does the human brain organize itself to give rise to complex cognitive tasks such as reading, problem solving and spatial reasoning?
Discovery of post-stimulus activated release implies new mechanisms for dopamine release The neurotransmitter dopamine continues to be released for nearly an hour after neurons are stimulated, suggesting the existence of secondary mechanisms that allow for sustained availability of dopamine in different regions of the brain including areas critical for memory consolidation, drug induced plasticity and maintaining active networks during working memory. More Cognitive Task Current Events and Cognitive Task News Articles
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Working Minds: A Practitioner's Guide to Cognitive Task Analysis (Bradford Books)
by Beth Crandall (Author), Gary Klein (Author), Robert R. Hoffman (Author)
Cognitive Task Analysis (CTA) helps researchers understand how cognitive skills and strategies make it possible for people to act effectively and get things done. CTA can yield information people need—employers faced with personnel issues, market researchers who want to understand the thought processes of consumers, trainers and others who design instructional systems, health care professionals who want to apply lessons learned from errors and accidents, systems analysts developing user specifications, and many other professionals. CTA can show what makes the workplace work—and what keeps it from working as well as it might. Working Minds is a true handbook, offering a set of tools for doing CTA: methods for collecting data about cognitive processes and events,...
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Functional Adult Screening Tool
Also With: CCC-SLP ELIZABETH PETERSON M.A. (Primary Contributor), NORTHEREN SPEECH SERVICES (Producer)
F.A.S.T. IS FOR FRUSTATED THERAPISTS UNABLE TO ACCESS CLIENTS WITH FUNCTIONAL TASKS. eASILY ASSESS THE AMOUNT OF ASSISTANCE REQUIRED FOR FUNCTIONAL LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE TASK COMPLETION. INCLUDED IS A GRID FOR DEMONSTRATING SMALL INCREMENTS OF PROGRSS FOR RE-SCREENING. THIS TOLL IS 'USER FRINDLY'.
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Cognitive Tasks Workbooks - Problem Solving Workbook - includes visual, verbal and mathematical pro
by HealthMegaMall
Cognitive Tasks Workbooks Problem Solving Workbook - includes visual, verbal and mathematical problems used to stimulate fundamental problem solving. 50 pages Product photo may not exactly match the product offered for sale. Please refer to the product description.
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Perspectives on Cognitive Task Analysis: Historical Origins and Modern Communities of Practice (Expertise: Research and Applications)
by Robert R. Hoffman (Author), Laura G. Militello (Author)
This volume is the first comprehensive history of task analysis, charting its origins from the earliest applied psychology through to modern forms of task analysis that focus on the study of cognitive work. Through this detailed historical analysis, it is made apparent how task analysis has always been cognitive.
Chapters cover the histories, key ideas, and contributions to methodology of a number of communities of practice, including: Sociotechnics, European Work Analysis, Naturalistic Decision Making, Cognitive Systems Engineering, Ethnography, Human Factors. Further, integrative chapters focus on the purposes of cognitive task analysis.
It is shown how all the various communities of practice are living in the same scientific universe, though are in many ways...
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Cognitive Task Analysis (Volume in the Expertise: Research and Application Series)
by Jan Maarten Schraagen (Editor), Susan F. Chipman (Editor), Valerie L. Shalin (Editor)
Cognitive task analysis is a broad area consisting of tools and techniques for describing the knowledge and strategies required for task performance. Cognitive task analysis has implications for the development of expert systems, training and instructional design, expert decision making and policymaking. It has been applied in a wide range of settings, with different purposes, for instance: specifying user requirements in system design or specifying training requirements in training needs analysis. The topics to be covered by this work include: general approaches to cognitive task analysis, system design, instruction, and cognitive task analysis for teams. The work settings to which the tools and techniques described in this work have been applied include: 911 dispatching, faultfinding on...
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Handbook of Cognitive Task Design (Human Factors and Ergonomics)
by Erik Hollnagel (Editor)
This Handbook serves as a single source for theories, models, and methods related to cognitive task design. It provides the scientific and theoretical basis required by industrial and academic researchers, as well as the practical and methodological guidance needed by practitioners who face problems of building safe and effective human-technology systems. Fundamental across a wide range of disciplines, from military systems to consumer goods and process industries, cognitive task design covers the whole life-cycle of work from pre-analysis, specification, design, risk assessment, implementation, training, daily operation, fault finding, maintenance, and upgrading. It applies to people, sophisticated machines, and to human-machine ensembles. This comprehensive volume summarizes...
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Applied Cognitive Task Analysis in Aviation
by Thomas L. Seamster (Author), Richard E. Redding (Author), George L. Kaempf (Author)
A guide to cognitive task analysis in aviation which seeks to bridge the gap between the research and practitioner community who do not have training in statistics, psychology or cognition. A discrete set of methods and guidelines is provided in an aviation specific framework. Methods presented are those most feasible in operational environments.
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![Electrophysiological correlates of interval timing in the Stop-Reaction-Time task [An article from: Cognitive Brain Research]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51w5k0y0LAL._SL160_.jpg)
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Electrophysiological correlates of interval timing in the Stop-Reaction-Time task [An article from: Cognitive Brain Research]
by T.B. Penney (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Cognitive Brain Research, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: Scalp-recorded event-related potentials were recorded while participants completed an auditory or a visual Stop-Reaction-Time task (Stop-RT task). Participants were asked to listen to a sequence of tones (Experiment 1) or view a sequence of LED flashes (Experiment 2) that had a constant stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) of either 470 or 770 ms, and to respond as soon as the sequence ended. Sequence length varied across trials, so counting the tones or light flashes did not permit determination of sequence end....
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![Private speech on an executive task: relations with task difficulty and task performance [An article from: Cognitive Development]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/416W0TT14KL._SL160_.jpg)
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Private speech on an executive task: relations with task difficulty and task performance [An article from: Cognitive Development]
by C. Fernyhough (Author), E. Fradley (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Cognitive Development, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: Measures of private speech and task performance were obtained for a sample of 46 5- and 6-year-olds engaged on a mechanical version of the Tower of London (ToL) task. Two different sets of four puzzles of increasing difficulty were attempted on two occasions. In line with Vygotskian predictions, there was a quadratic relation between private speech and task difficulty, but no evidence of a shift towards self-regulatory sub-types of private speech with increasing task difficulty. Levels of self-regulatory private...
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![Total sleep deprivation increases the costs of shifting between simple cognitive tasks [An article from: Acta Psychologica]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ME064T9CL._SL160_.jpg)
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Total sleep deprivation increases the costs of shifting between simple cognitive tasks [An article from: Acta Psychologica]
by H. Heuer (Author), T. Kleinsorge (Author), W. Klein (Author), O. Kohlisch (Author)
This digital document is a journal article from Acta Psychologica, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description: In two experiments we studied the effects of one night of total sleep deprivation on task-shift costs. In different conditions shifts were between types of judgment (extradimensional shifts) and between stimulus-response mappings (intradimensional shifts). In addition, with an alternating-runs procedure we used short and long response-to-stimulus intervals and also external precues to vary the opportunities for advance configuration of task sets. Under all conditions sleep deprivation increased shift costs derived...
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