MD Anderson and Advanced Biology collaborate to host the virtual Cancer Neuroscience Symposium – News-Medical.Net

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center will host the virtual Cancer Neuroscience Symposium Sept. 22-23, 2022, in collaboration with the journal Advanced Biology. The symposium is free to attend and gathers leading experts in the field to discuss a variety of topics on the relationship between cancer biology and neuroscience. Registration includes the opportunity to participate in an abstract competition and to view sessions following the event.

The Cancer Neuroscience Symposium will bring together neuroscientists, cancer biologists and clinicians in the developing field of cancer neuroscience to explore how the nervous system impacts tumor development and progression. The planned sessions will cover a broad range of topics including:

Interdisciplinary research is key to making impactful discoveries in cancer neuroscience, so it is critical to assemble scientists with complementary expertise in order to share insights in tumor neurobiology, nervous system tumors, neurotoxicity and symptom research. By hosting this symposium with Advanced Biology, MD Anderson is pleased to foster discussion and collaboration between the disciplines and to stimulate advances in this emerging field that can benefit our patients."

Moran Amit, M.D., Ph.D., symposium organizer, assistant professor of Head and Neck Surgery

The symposium also includes an abstract competition open to all registrants. All submitted abstracts will be published as part of a proceedings supplement in Advanced Biology, and the top three will be selected for a monetary award. Researchers are encouraged to send their submissions to [emailprotected] by Sept. 1. Select early-stage investigators also will be invited to work with an editor to contribute a perspective piece in a future issue of the journal.

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MD Anderson and Advanced Biology collaborate to host the virtual Cancer Neuroscience Symposium - News-Medical.Net

Smells Experienced in Nature Evoke Positive Well-being – Neuroscience News

Summary: The smell of fresh cut grass or blooming flowers appears to have a positive effect on a persons overall well-being, a new study reveals. Researchers say the smells of nature can help boost psychological well-being.

Source: University of Kent

Smells experienced in nature can make us feel relaxed, joyful, and healthy, according to new research led by the University of Kents Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology (DICE).

Smells were found to play an important role in delivering well-being benefits from interacting with nature, often with a strong link to peoples personal memories, and specific ecological characteristics and processes (e.g. fallen leaves rotting in the winter).

Nature is known to play an integral role in promotinghuman healthand well-being, shown especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, previous research has been limited in investigating which attributes of nature (e.g. smells, sounds, colors) affect human well-being and why.

This study published byAmbioexamines the role of smell in influencing well-being through nature.

Researchers found that smells affected multiple types of human well-being, with physical well-being noted most frequently, particularly in relation to relaxation, comfort and rejuvenation.

Absence of smell was also perceived to improve physical well-being, providing a cleansing environment due to the removal of pollution and unwanted smells associated withurban areas, and therefore enabling relaxation.

Relaxation reduces stress and lowerscortisol levels, which is often linked to a multitude of diseases, and so these findings could be particularly significant to public health professionals.

The research, carried out in woodland settings across four seasons, also found that smells evoked memories related to childhood activities. Many participants created meaningful connections with particular smells, rather than the woodland itself, and associated this with a memorable event. This, in turn, appeared to influence well-being by provoking emotional reactions to the memory.

The study was co-led by Dr. Jessica Fisher, a Postdoctoral Research Associate at DICE. She says that nature is a multisensory experience and our research demonstrates the potential significance of smell for well-being.

The study provides findings that can inform the work of practitioners, public health specialists,policy-makersand landscape planners looking to improve well-being outcomes through nature. Small interventions could lead to public health benefits.

Author: Press OfficeSource: University of KentContact: Press Office University of KentImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.Nature, smells, and human wellbeing by Phoebe R. Bentley et al. AMBIO

Abstract

Nature, smells, and human wellbeing

The link between nature and human wellbeing is well established. However, few studies go beyond considering the visual and auditory underpinnings of this relationship, even though engaging with nature is a multisensory experience.

While research linking smell to wellbeing exists, it focuses predominantly on smells as a source of nuisance/offence. Smells clearly have a prominent influence, but a significant knowledge gap remains in the nexus of nature, smell, and wellbeing.

Here, we examine how smells experienced in woodlands contribute to wellbeing across four seasons. We show that smells are associated with multiple wellbeing domains, both positively and negatively.

They are linked to memories, and specific ecological characteristics and processes over space/time. By making the link between the spatiotemporal variability in biodiversity and wellbeing explicit, we unearth a new line of enquiry.

Overall, the multisensory experience must be considered by researchers, practitioners, policy-makers and planners looking to improve wellbeing through nature.

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Is Everything We Think We Know About Alzheimers Wrong? – Neuroscience News

Summary: Recent scandals in Alzheimers research and problems with medications designed to help those with Alzheimers but failing to deliver sufficient results have researchers questioning the overwhelming focus on amyloid-beta in Alzheimers research.

Source: University of Michigan

If youve followed the news about Alzheimers disease research in the past few months, you might find yourself wondering what else could go wrong.

First, a much-anticipated new drug called Aduhelm got approval from the Food & Drug Administrationbut its actual effect on patients was so small that insurance wont cover it for most patients.

Then, several otherpromising drugsin development bypharmaceutical companiesgot sidelined or showed less-than-impressive results in clinical trials.

And then a scandal broke: New evidence came to light inSciencethat researchers had faked images in a paper published 16 years agoa paper that other researchers had trusted and relied on as they did their own work.

And what do all of these developments have to do with one another?

Theyre all tied to the molecule beta-amyloid, the plaque-forming sludge that gunks up the outside of brain cells. The molecule that decades of research has focused on as an important factor in the disease and potential treatments to reverse it.

But in fact, scientists at the Michigan Alzheimers Disease Center and elsewhere have spent years looking beyond amyloid for answers to the roots of dementia and ways to prevent or treat it.

Its true that amyloid plays a role in the brain and dementia, but Alzheimers disease is complicated and theres much more to it than one molecule, says Henry Paulson, M.D., Ph.D., who directs the center and has devoted his own laboratorys research at Michigan Medicine and his clinical care to dementia and otherneurodegenerative diseasesfor decades.

The paper at the center of the scandal has to do with a specific form of amyloid, AB*56, that was put forth as an important toxic oligomer encouraging plaque formation.

But Paulson says he and many of his colleagues have not paid much attention to it for many years, because researchers havent been so successful at achieving the same results that the original researchers claimed.

Im more worried about what this news might do to the publics perception of science than to our ability to make progress against this disease, he says. The long delay in uncovering the alleged fakery isnt ideal, and shows the importance of scientists speaking up and publishing results even when their experiments fail to prove another teams claim.

This kind of publishing of negative resultspapers that dont give good news about a potentially promising ideais not always encouraged, because scientists have more reason to leave those results on the shelf and spend time writing papers about things that do work.

But if no one knows that an effort to reproduce a scientific discovery has failed, then other scientists could spin their wheels driving down a blind alley.

Paulson notes that it is still important to study the protein that gets cut up, or cleaved, in order to make different forms of beta-amyloid, and the consequences of that process.

But hes not necessarily surprised by the failure of Aduhelm, the much-talked-about drug that got approval last year, to produce a sizable effect even in the patients it was tested in.

The drug is not available at the clinics or hospitals of Michigan Medicine, and Medicare will only cover its high cost for people taking part in clinical trials. Other drugs in the pipeline at drug companies that focus on beta-amyloid should be scrutinized carefully before getting any approval, he adds.

We believe much more attention needs to be paid to other factors and proteins underlying various dementias, ranging from environmental factors, to theimmune system, to specific molecules like tau, which is the other hallmark protein of Alzheimers disease, he explains. In my view, the Aduhelm story underscores the importance of continuing to look for other therapeutic targets in Alzheimers disease and related dementia.

Targeting amyloid for treatments may be like trying to saddle up a horse that has already left the barn, he saystoo much has happened in the disease process by the time the plaques begin to form for a treatment to make a difference.

Working upstream in the process, and doing more with modern tools to understand the process by studying people in the early stages of memory loss, could prove more important.

Thats why the Michigan Alzheimers Disease Center is always seeking people to take part in studies involving everything from brain scans to surveys. Anyone who wants to get involved can start the process by making an initial inquiry.

Alzheimers and other forms of dementia are complicated diseases, and likely result from multiple things going wrong in the brain over time, not one rogue molecule, Paulson explains. So it may end up that we need to treat patients with multiple treatments at once, targeting several aspects of their diseasejust like cancer or HIV-positive patients receive today.

But in the meantime, research has already shown another important upstream effect that many people may not realize, Paulson says.

Theres plenty of evidence that middle-aged andolder adultswho want to reduce their risk of dementia, or slow its onset, should focus on healthy habits like sleep, nutrition, exercise, social engagement, and controlling blood pressure and cholesterol. The role of lifelong education and learningwhether informal or formalis also clear

If youre 70 years old, I cant tell you to go back in time and eat healthier or get more years of school, but I can tell you to do more to get a good nights sleep as often as possible, and connect socially with other people, says Paulson, a professor of neurology.

For the millions of families dealing with a loved ones dementia today, the hope of new treatments may seem like a faint light on the horizon thats fading as their loved one gets further into their disease.

Thats why its also important to focus on supporting caregivers and understanding their needs through research that could impact public policy and insurance coverageanother focus of the centers programs and research.

Research takes time, which todays patients may not have a lot of. But with help from patients and families willing to volunteer for research studies, including tests of new drugs, it can move as quickly as possible, with safeguards in place to make sure its happening safely and honestly.

Author: Kara GavinSource: University of MichiganContact: Kara Gavin University of MichiganImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.Blots on a field? by Charles Piller. Science

Abstract

Blots on a field?

In August 2021, Matthew Schrag, a neuroscientist and physician at Vanderbilt University, got a call that would plunge him into a maelstrom of possible scientific misconduct. A colleague wanted to connect him with an attorney investigating an experimental drug for Alzheimers disease called Simufilam.

The drugs developer,Cassava Sciences, claimed it improved cognition, partly by repairing a protein that can block sticky brain deposits of the protein amyloid beta (A), a hallmark of Alzheimers.

The attorneys clientstwo prominent neuroscientists who are also short sellers who profit if the companys stock fallsbelieved some research related to Simufilam may have been fraudulent, according toa petition later filed on their behalfwith the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

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Cumulative Loneliness Associated With Accelerated Memory Aging in Older Adults – Neuroscience News

Summary: Feeling lonely for extended periods of time was associated with more rapid memory decline in those aged over 65.

Source: University of Michigan

Prolonged loneliness in adults over 65 may be an important risk factor for accelerated memory aging, according to a new study led by University of Michigan School of Public Health researchers.

We found that feeling lonely for a longer duration of time was associated with more rapid memory decline, suggesting that it is never too late in life to work on reducing feelings oflonelinessto support healthy aging, said Lindsay Kobayashi, assistant professor of epidemiology and senior author of the study published in the journalAlzheimers & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimers Association.

Kobayashi and colleagues analyzed interview data from more than 9,000 adults over age 50 from the U.S. Health and Retirement Study from 1996 to 2016. They evaluated participants cumulative durations of loneliness from 1996 to 2004 in relation to changes in memory function over the following 12 years from 2004 to 2016.

Xuexin Yu, a doctoral candidate in epidemiology and lead author of the study, said the association between loneliness and memory aging was strongest in individuals aged 65 and over, with women experiencing stronger and faster memory declines than men.

Women tend to have larger social networks than men, which may make women less likely to feel lonely than men, but more vulnerable once experiencing long-term loneliness, Yu said. Social stigma and the reluctance to admit loneliness may also be a factor in this observed gender-specific association.

Loneliness and objectivesocial isolationare important factors in the health ofolder adults, and researchers say that reducing loneliness in mid-to-late life may help maintainmemory functionfor a longer duration.

In addition to Yu and Kobayashi, Ashly Westrick, postdoctoral fellow at U-Ms Center for Social Epidemiology and Population Health, is a co-author of the study.

Author: Press OfficeSource: University of MichiganContact: Press Office University of MichiganImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.Cumulative loneliness and subsequent memory function and rate of decline among adults aged 50 in the United States, 1996 to 2016 by Xuexin Yu et al. Alzheimers & Dementia

Abstract

Cumulative loneliness and subsequent memory function and rate of decline among adults aged 50 in the United States, 1996 to 2016

The study objective was to investigate the association between loneliness duration and memory function over a 20-year period.

Data were from 9032 adults aged 50 in the Health and Retirement Study. Loneliness status (yes vs. no) was assessed biennially from 1996 to 2004 and its duration was categorized as never, 1 time point, 2 time points, and 3 time points. Episodic memory was assessed from 2004 to 2016 as a composite of immediate and delayed recall trials combined with proxy-reported memory. Mixed-effects linear regression models were fitted.

A longer duration of loneliness was associated with lower memory scores (P< 0.001) and a faster rate of decline (P< 0.001). The association was stronger among adults aged 65 than those aged <65 (three-way interactionP= 0.013) and was stronger among women than men (three-way interactionP= 0.002).

Cumulative loneliness may be a salient risk factor for accelerated memory aging, especially among women aged 65.

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Cumulative Loneliness Associated With Accelerated Memory Aging in Older Adults - Neuroscience News

Sharing Memories With Toddlers Helps Their Well-Being Into Adulthood – Neuroscience News

Summary: How a mother interacts and shared memories with her toddler has an impact on their offsprings well-being in adulthood.

Source: University of Otago

How mothers share memories with their children during toddlerhood impacts mental health and well-being in early adulthood, a University of Otago study has shown.

Researchers found 21-year-olds told more coherent stories about turning points in their lives if their mothers were taught new conversational techniques two decades earlier.

These adults also reported fewer symptoms of depression and greater self-esteem compared to adults in the study whose mothers interacted with them as usual.

The study, published inJournal of Research in Personality, is a long-term follow-up of a reminiscing intervention in which 115 mothers of toddlers were assigned to either acontrol groupor taught to use elaborative reminiscing for a year.

Elaborative reminiscing involves open, enriched, and responsive conversations with children about shared experiences of everyday events. This is the first study to show long-term benefits of mother-child reminiscing for emerging adult development.

Lead author Sean Marshall, a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Psychology, says understanding ways to improve themental healthof 18- to 25-year-olds is important because of their unique stage of life.

Emergingadultsface a volley of challenges as they leave home and enter university or the workforce.

We wanted to understand how well tamariki cope with new challenges as they enter adulthood and find ways to ease thepsychological stressthat typically accompanies these transitions, he says.

Project lead Professor Elaine Reese, of the Department of Psychology, says the soft-touch intervention inearly childhoodproved to have enduring benefits for psychological well-being and mental health.

This study is the first of its kind and is informing new interventions at home and in schools with parents and teachers of young children, she says.

Author: Press OfficeSource: University of OtagoContact: Press Office University of OtagoImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.Growing Memories: Benefits of an early childhood maternal reminiscing intervention for emerging adults turning point narratives and well-being by Sean Marshall et al. Journal of Research in Personality

Abstract

Growing Memories: Benefits of an early childhood maternal reminiscing intervention for emerging adults turning point narratives and well-being

The current study is an emerging adult follow-up of a longitudinal intervention study of maternal reminiscing (Growing Memories;N=115).

Mothers in the intervention condition were taught elaborative reminiscing skills when their children were 1.52.5years old. We tested long-term effects of the intervention for emerging adults turning-point narratives and well-being at age 21 (n=94; 82%).

Emerging adults in the intervention condition displayed greater causal coherence (connections between past and present self) in their turning-point narratives and reported higher self-esteem and fewer depression symptoms than those in the control condition, even after accounting forpersonality traitsand early childhood covariates.

These findings suggest that maternal reminiscing has a long-term impact on their offsprings narrative identity and well-being.

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Brain Fingerprinting of Adolescents Might Be Able to Predict Mental Health Problems Down the Line – Neuroscience News

Summary: The unique features of an individual adolescents brain can help predict their risks of developing mental health problems later in life.

Source: The Conversation

Despite the best efforts of clinicians and researchers for decades, we still do not fully know why some people develop mental disorders and others do not. However, changes in the brain are very likely our best clues to future mental health outcomes.

The adolescent brain is particularly important in this pursuit as changes during this period are rapid anddynamic, sculpting our individual uniqueness. Furthermore, most mental disordersemergeduring adolescence, with more than half occurring by 14 years of age, and three quarters by age 25.

By monitoring and tracking brain changes as they happen, we can tackle emerging mental health problems in adolescence and target early treatment. The challenge is accurately predicting the likelihood of a person developing a mental disorder, well before it happens.

We are researchers with the world-first Longitudinal Adolescent Brain Study (LABS). We have been tracking adolescent brain development, using MRI scans, for several years. Our recentpaperis the first to show the uniqueness of an adolescents brain (or their brain fingerprint) can predict mental health outcomes.

Brain fingerprinting could be the future of mental disorder prevention, allowing us to identify signs of concern in teenagers through brain imaging, and intervene early before illness develops.

Just as fingerprints are unique, each human brain has a unique profile of signals between brain regions thatbecome more individual and specialisedas people age.

To date, our study involves 125 participants, from 12 years of age, with over 500 brain scans among them. Our research captures brain and mental health development in adolescents over five years. It uses four-monthly brain imaging (MRIandEEG), and psychological and cognitive assessments.

We looked at each individualsfunctional connectome their brains system of neural pathways in action. We discovered that how unique these characteristics are is significantly associated with newpsychological distressreported at the time of subsequent scans four months later. In other words, the level of uniqueness seems to be predictive of a mental health outcome.

The MRI scans were undertaken during aresting state, as opposed to task-based functional MRI. It still tells us a lot about brain activity, such as how the brain keeps connections running or gets ready to do something. You could compare this to a mechanic, listening to a engine idling before its taken for a drive.

In the 12-year-olds we studied, we found unique functional whole-brain connectomes do exist. But a more specific network involved in controllinggoal-directed behaviour is less unique in early adolescence. In other words, this network is still quite similar across different people.

We found the extent of its uniqueness can predict anxiety and depression symptoms that emerge later. So those with less unique brains had higher levels of distress down the line.

We suspect the level of maturation in this brain network the part that involves executive control or goal-directed behaviours may provide a biological explanation for why some teens are at increased vulnerability of mental distress. It may be that delays in the fine tuning of such executive function networks lead to increased mental health issues.

By doing brains scans and other assessments at regular intervals up to 15 times for each participant LABS not only provides fine-grained information about adolescent brain development, but it can also better pinpoint the emergence and onset of mental ill health.

Our approach allows us to better establish the occurrence and sequence of changes in the brain (and in behaviours, lifestyle factors, thinking) and mental health risks and problems.

In addition to unique brain signatures to predict psychological distress, we expect there will be other ways (usingmachine learning) we can interpret information about a persons brain. This will get us closer to accurately predicting their mental health and wellbeing outcomes. Data rich, studies over a long time period are the key to finding this holy grail of neuroscience.

Identifying mental health risk in teenagers means we may be able to intervene before adulthood, when many mental health disorders become embedded and more difficult to resolve.

This vision for the future of mental health care offers hope in the wake of recent statistics from the 202021National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing. They revealed two in five Australians aged 16 to 24 had a mental disorder within the previous year, the highest rate of any age group. This is a jump of 50% since the last national survey in 2007.

WithA$11 billion spenton mental health-related services in Australia every year, better prevention via early detection should be an urgent priority.

Author: Daniel Hermens, Jim Lagopoulos, and Zach ShanSource: The ConversationContact: Daniel Hermens, Jim Lagopoulos, and Zach Shan The ConversationImage: The image is in the public domain

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Researchers Visualize the Intricate Branching of the Nervous System – Neuroscience News

Summary: Study reveals the molecular mechanism that allows neural networks to grow and branch out.

Source: Yale

Our nervous system is composed of billions of neurons that speak to one another through their axons and dendrites. When the human brain develops, these structures branch out in a beautifully intricate yet poorly understood way that allows nerve cells to form connections and send messages throughout the body. And now, Yale researchers have discovered the molecular mechanism behind the growth of this complex system.

Their findings are published inScience Advances.

Neurons are highly branched cells, and theyre like this because each neuron makes a connection with thousands of other neurons, says Joe Howard, Ph.D., Eugene Higgins Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry and professor of physics, and senior researcher of the study.

Were working on this branching processhow do branches form and grow? That is whats underlying the whole way thenervous systemworks.

The team studied neuronal growth in fruit flies as they matured from embryos into larvae. To visualize this process, they tagged neurons with fluorescent markers and imaged them on a spinning disk microscope. Because neurons reside just under the cuticle [outermost layer], the researchers were able to observe this process in real time in live larvae.

After imaging the neurons at different stages of development, the team was able to create time-lapse movies of the growth.

In the earliest stages of development, thesensory neuronsbegan with only two or three dendrites. But in as little as five days, they blossomed into big, tree-like structures with thousands of branches.

Analysis of dendritic tips revealed their dynamic and stochastic (randomly determined) growth, which fluctuated among growing, shrinking, and paused states.

Before our study, there was a theory thatneuronsmay be dilating and deflating like a balloon, says Sonal Shree, Ph.D., associate research scientist and lead author of the study. And we found that no, theyre not inflating like a balloon, but rather growing and branching their tips.

We found that we can completely explain neuronal growth and the overall morphology in terms of just what the tips of the cells are doing, says Sabyasachi Sutradhar, Ph.D., associate research scientist and joint lead author of the study.

This means that now we can focus on the tips, because if we can understand how they work, then we can understand how the whole shape of the cell comes about, says Howard.

There is a whole world of branching in biology, from the veins and arteries of the circulatory system to the bronchioles of the lung. Howards lab hopes that better understanding of branching at thecellular levelwill also shed light on these processes at the molecular and tissue levels.

Author: Isabella BackmanSource: YaleContact: Isabella Backman YaleImage: The image is credited to Howard Lab

Original Research: Open access.Dynamic instability of dendrite tips generates the highly branched morphologies of sensory neurons by Sonal Shree et al. Science Advances

Abstract

Dynamic instability of dendrite tips generates the highly branched morphologies of sensory neurons

The highly ramified arbors of neuronal dendrites provide the substrate for the high connectivity and computational power of the brain. Altered dendritic morphology is associated with neuronal diseases.

Many molecules have been shown to play crucial roles in shaping and maintaining dendrite morphology. However, the underlying principles by which molecular interactions generate branched morphologies are not understood.

To elucidate these principles, we visualized the growth of dendrites throughout larval development ofDrosophilasensory neurons and found that the tips of dendrites undergo dynamic instability, transitioning rapidly and stochastically between growing, shrinking, and paused states.

By incorporating these measured dynamics into an agent-based computational model, we showed that the complex and highly variable dendritic morphologies of these cells are a consequence of the stochastic dynamics of their dendrite tips.

These principles may generalize to branching of other neuronal cell types, as well as to branching at the subcellular and tissue levels.

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Mothers Use the Benefits of Song to Promote Infant Development – Neuroscience News

Summary: Attention-grabbing songs mothers sing to their little ones help develop emotional regulation and brain structures associated with self-regulation.

Source: University of Miami

Professor Shannon de lEtoile knows the impact of a mothers lullaby.

As a young music therapist in Colorado, de lEtoile saw that when disadvantaged mothers were encouraged to sing to their babies, they were amazed by the positive responses they received. She quickly realized that music could be a powerful tool to help mothers learn more about their infants and to build a relationship with their new child.

Soon, de lEtoile began researching the practice, called infant-directed singing, and learned its wide range of returns. Chief among them, infant-directed singing helps babies learn to regulate their emotions, which allows them to later navigate socialization, school, and the professional world, according to de lEtoile, who has spent her career studying the habit.

If a mother can sing in a way that captures the infants attention, it can help them tap into those brain structures that they need to develop for self-regulation, said de lEtoile, a board-certified music therapist and associate dean of graduate studies at the University of Miami Frost School of Music.

Yet, while singing to infants is something most mothers do naturallywithout even realizing the benefitsfor those in difficult circumstances, infant-directed singing may not be as instinctive, de lEtoile observed. She has noticed that mothers impacted by depression, domestic violence, or substance exposure may need encouragement and guidance to provide this unique form of caregiving.

Infant-directed singing is a way that mothers communicate with their babies that most infants can recognize and respond to. But to be most effective, the mother needs to be attentive and sensitive to infant cues, said de lEtoile. For some moms that may not be happening and that impacts the infant.

But because infant-directed singing is so advantageous, de lEtoile is working with the College of Arts and Sciences Department of Psychologys flagship early intervention program at theLinda Ray Intervention Centerto create a coaching program that will guide mothers in the practice.

Recently, de lEtoiles efforts received support from theGRAMMY MuseumGrant Program, a division of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. This funding will sponsor her pilot study to train mothers of infants at the center in the critical caregiving skill. The study is one of just six scientific research projects that earned funding from the organization this year.

For close to three decades, the Linda Ray Intervention Center, which serves children from birth to age 2, has been the site of some of the most cutting-edge research in the nation. That research focuses on the developmental needs of at-risk infants and how to best support mothers in building secure bonds with their children.

We want to give moms and caregivers these tools they can use, so that they can feel empowered to help their babies thrive, de lEtoile said. Building self-regulation at an early age is so important because it helps children deal with adversity. Children who dont regulate well are lacking in resilience, and they may have problems later in life, like obesity, addiction, and aggression.

De lEtoile and the centers executive director, Isabel Chica, are now in the process of identifying and training staff members at the center, who will coach mothers for a month in the most beneficial ways to sing to their infants.

The process includes watching and recording mothers as they sing to their infants and then demonstrating to these mothers how they can be sensitive to their infants emotions while singing. Mothers will be able to notice if the infant is benefiting because the baby will gaze longer at the mother and reach a contented state.

Chica believes the project is a great fit for the center.

One of our main goals is to provide families with opportunities to learn new strategies and techniques that support positive parent-child interactions, and this pilot may strengthen parenting skills as well as a parents ability to help their child self-regulate, Chica said. We believe this is a great way for healthy attachments to develop between parent and child.

As part of the study, after each mother completes the training, de lEtoile will work with the Frost Schools music engineering program to analyze recordings of the mothers voice. Ideally, the analysis will reveal changes over time in the mothers ability to modify their singing according to the infants emotions.

Videos of the babies will also be analyzed to determine engagement with the mother over time, tracked through their gaze (whether they are focused on the mother), as well as their level of comfort, revealed in the babys facial cues.

For an infant to make progress toward self-regulation, they need focused attention on the mother. And they also need to have achieved an optimal level of arousal where they are not excited, or fussy, but comfortable, she said.

The project also signals a new frontier for de lEtoile, who in the past has documented how infant-directed singing occurs naturally, in both typical and clinical populations, including mothers with post-partum depression and infants with Down syndrome. In this project, she is providing a community-based, infant-directed singing intervention and is thrilled to work with the Linda Ray Intervention Center.

For more than two years, de lEtoile has been working closely with center staff to develop the program so that it aligns with the needs of their families. The staffers will soon begin coaching some of the mothers, and both Chica and de lEtoile are eager to begin.

We want this project to have a lasting legacy and impact, not just for us to have positive outcomes but to create a model for how a program like this could be implemented in other early intervention facilities, de lEtoile said.

Author: Megan OndrizekSource: University of MiamiContact: Megan Ondrizek University of MiamiImage: The image is credited to Jenny Hudak/University of Miam

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Perceived Choice in Music Listening Is Linked to Pain Relief – Neuroscience News

Summary: People given the impression they had control over the music they heard experienced more pain relief than those who felt as though they had no control over their music exposure.

Source: PLOS

A new study explores the use of music-listening to relieve acute pain, finding that people who were given the impression that they had control over the music they heard experienced more pain relief than people who were not given such control.

Dr. Claire Howlin of Queen Mary University of London, U.K., and colleagues from University College Dublin, Ireland, present these findings inPLOS ONEon August 3, 2022.

Music listening can be used forpainrelief, especially forchronic pain, i.e., pain lasting more than 12 weeks. However, the underlying mechanisms of these benefits are unclear, especially for acute pain, i.e., pain lasting less than 12 weeks.

Basic musical features, such as tempo or energy, seem to be less important for pain relief; instead, feeling able to make decisions about the music may be key for pain relief.

However, previous work has largely focused on findings from lab-based samples that did not explore real-world, pre-existing acute pain.

To improve understanding, Howlin and colleagues asked 286 adults experiencing real-worldacute painto rate their pain before and after listening to a music track. The track was specially composed in two different versions of varying complexity.

Participants were randomly assigned to hear either the low- or high-complexity version, and some were randomly selected to be given the impression that they had some control over the musical qualities of the track, although they heard the same track regardless of their choice.

The researchers found that participants who felt they had control over the music experienced greater relief in the intensity of their pain than participants who were not given such an impression. In questionnaires, participants reported enjoying both versions of the track, but no links were found between music complexity and amount of pain relief.

Additionally, participants who engage more actively with music in theireveryday lifeexperienced even greater pain-relief benefits from having a sense of control over the track used in this study.

These findings suggest that choice and engagement with music are important for optimizing its pain-relief potential. Future research could further explore the relationship between music choice and subsequent engagement, as well as strategies for boosting engagement to improvepain relief.

The authors add: Now we know that the act of choosing music is an important part of the well-being benefits that we see frommusic listening. Its likely that people listen more closely, or more carefully when they choose themusicthemselves.

Author: Press OfficeSource: PLOSContact: Press Office PLOSImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.Tune out pain: Agency and active engagement predict decreases in pain intensity after music listening by Claire Howlin et al. PLOS ONE

Abstract

Tune out pain: Agency and active engagement predict decreases in pain intensity after music listening

Music is increasingly being recognised as an adjuvant treatment for pain management. Music can help to decrease the experience of both chronic and experimental pain. Cognitive agency has been identified as a specific mechanism that may mediate the analgesic benefits of music engagement however, it is unclear if this specific mechanism translates to acute pain.

Previous attempts to understand the cognitive mechanisms that underpin music analgesia have been predominantly lab-based, limiting the extent to which observed effects may apply to participants everyday lives.

Addressing these gaps, in naturalistic settings, the present study examined the degree to which cognitive agency (i.e., perceived choice in music), music features (i.e., complexity), and individual levels of musical sophistication were related to perceived pain. In an online global experiment, using a randomised between groups experimental design with two levels for choice (no choice and perceived choice) and two levels for music (high and low complexity), a sample of 286 adults experiencing acute pain reported their pain intensity and pain unpleasantness pre- and post-music listening.

A bespoke piece of music was co-created with a commercial artist to enable the manipulation of music complexity while controlling for familiarity, while facilitating an authentic music listening experience.

Overall, findings demonstrated that increased perceived control over music is associated with analgesic benefits, and that perceived choice is more important than music complexity. Highlighting the importance of listener engagement, people who reported higher levels of active engagement experienced greater decreases of pain intensity in the perceived choice condition, than those who reported lower levels of active engagement.

These findings have implications for both research and practice, emphasising the importance of facilitating freedom of choice, and sustained engagement with music throughout music listening interventions.

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Perceived Choice in Music Listening Is Linked to Pain Relief - Neuroscience News

An Effective New Treatment for Chronic Back Pain Targets the Nervous System – Neuroscience News

Summary: A newly developed method called sensorimotor retraining appears to be effective at treating chronic back pain.

Source: University of Neww South Wales

People challenged with chronic back pain have been given hope with a new treatment that focuses on retraining how the back and the brain communicate, a randomised controlled trial run by researchers at UNSW Sydney and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) and several other Australian and European universities has shown.

The study, funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), was described today in a paper published in theJournal of the American Medical Association. The study, carried out at NeuRA, divided 276 participants into two groups: one undertook a 12-week course of sensorimotor retraining and the other received a 12-week course of sham treatments designed to control for placebo effects, which are common in low back pain trials.

Professor James McAuleyfrom UNSWsSchool of Health Sciences, andNeuRAsaid sensorimotor retraining alters how people think about their body in pain, how they process sensory information from their back and how they move their back during activities.

What we observed in our trial was a clinically meaningful effect on pain intensity and a clinically meaningful effect on disability. People were happier, they reported their backs felt better and their quality of life was better. It also looks like these effects were sustained over the long term; twice as many people were completely recovered. Very few treatments for low back pain show long-term benefits, but participants in the trial reported improved quality of life one year later.

The new treatment challenges traditional treatments for chronic back pain, such as drugs and treatments that focus on the back such as spinal manipulation, injections, surgery and spinal cord stimulators, by viewing long-standing back pain as a modifiable problem of the nervous system rather than a disc, bone or muscle problem.

If you compare the results to studies looking atopioid treatment versus placebo, the difference for that is less than one point out of 10 in pain intensity, its only short term and there is little improvement in disability. We see similar results for studies comparingmanual therapy to shamorexercise to sham, Prof. McAuley said.

This is the first new treatment of its kind for back pain which has been the number one cause of theGlobal Disability Burden for the last 30 years that has been tested against placebo.

How it works

Prof. McAuley said the treatment is based on research that showed the nervous system of people suffering from chronic back pain behaves in a different way from people who have a recent injury to the lower back.

People with back pain are often told their back is vulnerable and needs protecting. This changes how we filter and interpret information from our back and how we move our back. Over time, the back becomes less fit, and the way the back and brain communicate is disrupted in ways that seem to reinforce the notion that the back is vulnerable and needs protecting. The treatment we devised aims to break this self-sustaining cycle, he said.

ProfessorLorimer Moseley AO, Bradley Distinguished Professor at the University of South Australia said, This treatment, which includes specially designed education modules and methods and sensorimotor retraining, aims to correct the dysfunction we now know is involved in most chronic back pain and thats a disruption within the nervous system. The disruption results in two problems: a hypersensitive pain system and imprecise communication between the back and the brain.

The treatment aims to achieve three goals. The first is to align patient understanding with the latest scientific understanding about what causes chronic back pain. The second is to normalise the way the back and the brain communicate with each other, and thirdly, to gradually retrain the body and the brain back to a normal protection setting and a resumption of usual activities.

ProfessorBen Wandof Notre Dame University, the clinical director on the trial, emphasised that by using a program of sensorimotor training, patients can see that their brain and back are not communicating well, but can also experience an improvement in this communication. He said, We think this gives them confidence to pursue an approach to recovery that trains both the body and the brain.

Training the body and the brain

Traditional therapies concentrate on fixing something in your back, injecting a disc, loosening up the joints or strengthening the muscles. What makes sensorimotor retraining different, according to Prof. McAuley is that it looks at the whole system what people think about their back, how the back and brain communicate, how the back is moved, as well as the fitness of the back.

The study authors say that more research is needed to replicate these results and to test the treatment in different settings and populations. They also want to test their approach in other chronic pain states that show similar disruption within the nervous system. They are optimistic about rolling out a training package to bring this new treatment to clinics and have enlisted partner organisations to start that process.

Once the new treatment is available via trained physiotherapists, exercise physiologists and other clinicians Prof. McAuley hopes this to occur in the next six to nine months people with chronic back pain should be able to access it at a similar cost to other therapies offered by those practitioners.

Author: Lachlan GilbertSource: University of New South WalesContact: Lachlan Gilbert University of New South WalesImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.Effect of Graded Sensorimotor Retraining on Pain Intensity in Patients With Chronic LowBack Pain by James McAuley et al. JAMA

Abstract

Effect of Graded Sensorimotor Retraining on Pain Intensity in Patients With Chronic LowBack Pain

Importance

The effects of altered neural processing, defined as altering neural networks responsible for perceptions of pain and function, on chronic pain remains unclear.

Objective

To estimate the effect of a graded sensorimotor retraining intervention (RESOLVE) on pain intensity in people with chronic low back pain.

Design, Setting, and Participants

This parallel, 2-group, randomized clinical trial recruited participants with chronic (>3 months) nonspecific low back pain from primary care and community settings. A total of 276 adults were randomized (in a 1:1 ratio) to the intervention or sham procedure and attention control groups delivered by clinicians at a medical research institute in Sydney, Australia. The first participant was randomized on December 10, 2015, and the last was randomized on July 25, 2019. Follow-up was completed on February 3, 2020.

Interventions

Participants randomized to the intervention group (n=138) were asked to participate in 12 weekly clinical sessions and home training designed to educate them about and assist them with movement and physical activity while experiencing lower back pain. Participants randomized to the control group (n=138) were asked to participate in 12 weekly clinical sessions and home training that required similar time as the intervention but did not focus on education, movement, and physical activity. The control group included sham laser and shortwave diathermy applied to the back and sham noninvasive brain stimulation.

Main Outcomes and Measures

The primary outcome was pain intensity at 18 weeks, measured on an 11-point numerical rating scale (range, 0 [no pain] to 10 [worst pain imaginable]) for which the between-group minimum clinically important difference is 1.0 point.

Results

Among 276 randomized patients (mean [SD] age, 46 [14.3] years; 138 [50%] women), 261 (95%) completed follow-up at 18 weeks. The mean pain intensity was 5.6 at baseline and 3.1 at 18 weeks in the intervention group and 5.8 at baseline and 4.0 at 18 weeks in the control group, with an estimated between-group mean difference at 18 weeks of 1.0 point ([95% CI, 1.5 to 0.4];P=.001), favoring the intervention group.

Conclusions and Relevance

In this randomized clinical trial conducted at a single center among patients with chronic low back pain, graded sensorimotor retraining, compared with a sham procedure and attention control, significantly improved pain intensity at 18 weeks. The improvements in pain intensity were small, and further research is needed to understand the generalizability of the findings.

Trial Registration

ANZCTR Identifier:ACTRN12615000610538

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