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MIT Study Sheds Light On The Brain's Ability To Change In Response To Learning
If you"ve ever felt doomed to repeat your mistakes, researchers at MIT"s Picower Institute for Learning and Memory may have explained why: Brain cells may only learn from experience when we do something right and not when we fail.
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ASC X12 Releases Implementation Guide: "Personal Health Record Transfer Between Health Plans"
Standardized requirements for one health insurance plan to electronically send Personal Health Record (PHR) data to another health insurance plan, called the "Personal Health Record (PHR) Transfer Between Health Plans Technical Report, 005050X274," was released by the Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X12, providing monumental interoperability among insurance companies assisting consumers.
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GOP Senators Signal They Will Not Block Sotomayor; Full Senate Vote Expected By Aug. 7
Senate Republicans on Thursday said that they do not plan to block a vote on Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, the Washington Post reports. Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) told Sotomayor that he would not support any effort to filibuster her nomination, meaning that she would need a simple majority of 50 votes to be confirmed. Because Democrats hold 60 votes in the Senate, Sessions" comments effectively end "any possible suspense over her fate," according to the Post (Kane et al., Washington Post, 7/17). Sessions said, "I will not support and I don"t think any member of this side will support a filibuster or any attempt to block a vote on your nomination," adding, "I look forward to you getting that vote before we recess in August." According to CQ Politics, Sessions" statement that Republicans will not filibuster "is bound to rile conservative activists," who have urged GOP senators to delay the vote to allow more time to build opposition.Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) also signaled that he would vote for Sotomayor"s confirmation (Perine, CQ Politics, 7/16). He said, "We"ll see what your future holds, but I think it"s going to be pretty bright" (Bendavid, "Washington Wire," Wall Street Journal, 7/16). Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) said that although he will not support Sotomayor"s confirmation, he will not filibuster the vote (Rushing, The Hill, 7/16). Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) told Sotomayor, "Thank you for giving us such a cordial response, and I am mightily impressed" (Washington Post, 7/17).Voting Timeline UnclearSenate Judiciary Committee Chair Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) said he would schedule a committee vote on the nomination for July 21. It remains unclear whether committee Republicans will delay the vote until July 28, as they are permitted to do under committee rules. Sessions called the July 21 vote "unrealistic," adding that there "will be a number of questions submitted to the nominee that take some time" (CQ Politics, 7/16). A party-line vote on the nomination does not seem likely, as a number of committee Republicans have praised Sotomayor and signaled that they will vote to confirm her, the AP/Boston Globe reports (Holland, AP/Boston Globe, 7/17). The committee"s vote serves as a recommendation to the full Senate, which likely will hold its final roll-call vote on the nomination by Aug. 7 (Washington Post, 7/17). Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) on Thursday said he wants a floor vote on Sotomayor "as quickly as possible" (Brady, Roll Call, 7/16).During the hearing on Thursday, Sotomayor reiterated that she would consider each case individually and declined to state her specific views on abortion rights. In response to Coburn, she said, "Would you want a ... nominee who came in here and said, "I agree with you. This is unconstitutional," before I had a case before me?" She added, "I don"t know that that"s a justice that I can be" (Kiely/Biskupic, USA Today, 7/17). According to the New York Times, "Some observers thought they detected her tipping her hand on abortion rights when she said Supreme Court precedents required abortion restrictions to make exceptions for a woman"s health" (Savage, New York Times, 7/17).
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Parkinson's Disease Alters Patient's Ability To Learn From Rewards While Treatment Affects Ability To Learn From Negative Outcomes

A new neuropsychological memory test is helping to uncover how Parkinson"s disease can alter people"s ability to learn about the consequences of the choices they make. The test was developed by Dr. Mark Gluck, professor of neuroscience at the Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience at Rutgers University, Newark, working with co-researchers at Rutgers, New York University, and in Hungary. As reported in a forthcoming article in the journal Brain (advanced access published May 4, 2009 -- doi:10.1093/brain/awp094), Gluck and co-researchers Nikoletta Bodi and Szabolcs Keri of Semmelweis University, Hungary, found that non-medicated patients in the early stages of Parkinson"s were selectively impaired at learning from reward. Patients in Hungary were tested using a novel feedback-learning task developed by Gluck and his colleagues: Catherine E. Myers, research professor, Rutgers University, Newark; and Nathaniel Daw, assistant professor, New York University. The research was supported by a Dekker Foundation Award from the Bachman-Strauss Dystonia and Parkinson Foundation. "What we are seeing in recently diagnosed patients is that prior to being put on any medications, they exhibit a selective impairment in their ability to learn from positive (rewarding) outcomes while their sensitivity to learning from negative (or punishing) outcomes is normal," says Gluck, director of Rutgers" Center for Collaborative Research on Cognition and Parkinson"s Disease. This selective deficit in learning from reward is not surprising, says Gluck, because scientists have long known that dopamine is used to carry reward information throughout the brain. Parkinson"s patients, however, have lost most of their dopamine-producing cells by the time they are first diagnosed with the disease. This decrease in their ability to process rewarding outcomes could be one reason why many Parkinson"s patients experience depression, says Gluck. "It"s not just that they have an awful disease, but they have lost the ability to process the rewarding aspects of life." Gluck and colleagues found that this reward-learning deficit in un-medicated Parkinson"s patients is in direct contrast to what is seen in patients once they begin treatment with dopamine agonists, a standard therapy for treating the disease"s motor symptoms. On dopamine agonists, a patient"s ability to learn from positive rewarding outcomes improved to normal levels. But there was a catch - their ability to learn from negative (or punishing) outcomes, which had previously been normal, was now impaired. Gluck explains that an increased sensitivity to learning from events that results in positive outcomes, coupled with a decrease in the ability to learn from negative outcomes, could explain why some Parkinson patients treated with dopamine agonists develop impulse-control disorders, including pathological gambling, hypersexuality, alcoholism, and compulsive eating and shopping. All of these behaviors can be understood as reward-seeking behaviors in the absence of appropriate sensitivity to their negative consequences. "For example," notes Gluck, "if your ability to learn from negative outcomes is reduced and you play the slot machines and win $10 for a few rounds but lose many more times in between, what you may recall best is the thrill of winning. As such, you will be hampered in your ability to learn that gambling can also have negative consequences." The ability to test the effects on feedback learning in early onset Parkinson"s disease could provide additional insight into the impact of dopamine loss on cognition and behavior. It also could pave the way for identifying which Parkinson"s patients are most likely to experience agonist-related feedback problems so they can be treated with alternate medications. Other ongoing research by Gluck and his clinical collaborators in New Jersey, New York, Europe and the Middle East aims to further understand how and why learning and decision making is impaired by Parkinson"s disease and how the medications used to treat motor symptoms can impair or remediate these essential cognitive abilities. Feedback Learning, Dementia, Depression and Drug Addiction In addition to providing new insight into the effects of Parkinson"s disease and dopamine agonists on learning and personality, the new feedback-learning tasks developed at Rutgers University are being used to study learning and decision-making deficits in people suffering from fronto-temporal dementia (FTD), a degenerative condition involving the front part of the brain"s cortex. FTD is associated with dramatic changes in personality, behavior and thought processes, which can include inhibition, social withdrawal and compulsive behaviors. With co-investigator Murray Grossman of the University of Pennsylvania, Gluck is studying changes in positive and negative feedback learning in those diagnosed with FTD. That research, funded with a grant from the Association for Frontotemporal Dementia, has the potential to help in identifying methods to aid in correcting behavior for FTD patients. "If, for example, FTD patients learn better from reward then punishment, this would mean caregivers might be advised to avoid reacting negatively to inappropriate behaviors and to focus instead on rewarding patients for not engaging in inappropriate behaviors," says Gluck. In related research, Gluck is working with Palestinian and Israel doctors, as part of a joint Rutgers-sponsored Israeli-Palestinian brain research project, to study cognitive deficits in Israeli and Palestinian patients suffering from Parkinson"s disease and depression. Helen Paxton Rutgers University


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