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| | | ALL IN THE MIND
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| | | Dr Raj Persaud explores the limits and potential of the mind, revealing the latest research and bringing together experts and commentators from the worlds of psychiatry, psychology and mental health. Contact All in the Mind ´óÏó´«Ã½ Action Line:
0800 044 044 | | | | | LISTEN AGAINÌý30 min | | | |
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"All in the MindÌýÌýprovides a unique chance to meet the people at the cutting edge of research and developments on all aspects of the mind and brain from around the world. Please join me as we attempt to illuminate the most complex and least understood mechanism we have so far found in the Universe - the mind."
Prof. Raj Persaud
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| | | | PROGRAMME DETAILS | | | |
| | | | DANGEROUS AND SEVERE PERSONALITY DISORDER
In the light of new recommendations that those with DSPD (also known as psychopaths) should be locked up even if they haven’t committed a crime, Dr Raj Persaud asks Dr Bob Johnson, consultant psychiatrist and co-founder of the and Anthony Maden, Professor of Forensic Psychiatry at and Clinical Director of Dangerously Severe Personality Disorder services at Broadmoor Hospital, whether psychopaths are untreatable, as previously believed, or whether there is hope that they can change.
GOLDEN RATIO
Have you ever wondered why some paintings appeal to you more than others when you visit an art gallery?Ìý Of course it could simply be that it’s a nice picture, but psychologists believe there’s something called the Golden Rectangle.Ìý If paintings contain shapes with the ratio of the Golden Rectangle, we automatically like them better.Ìý ClaudiaÌýHammond tests this theory at London’s National Gallery with the help of John Sharp, teacher in Geometry and art and Chris McManus, Professor of Psychology at .
Click here to see the paintings and to test the theory of the Golden Ratio
CREATING A ‘FLAT MAP’ OF THE HUMAN BRAIN
Would we be able to see more of what’s going on in the brain if we smoothed out all the creases and flattened it out?
A team of mathematicians and neurologists including , Professor of Mathematics at Ìýhas been working on producing a ‘flat map’of the brain using information from functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) scans.
Dr Raj Persaud talks to about the map which would allow researchers to observe the entire surface of the brain, particularly regions buried within cortical folds.Ìý Dr Persaud also asks Mick Brammer, Professor of Image Analysis at the Institute of Psychiatry in London about the advantages of a ‘flat map’ of the human brain in the diagnosis and treatment of illnesses.
Additional information:
P.O.Box 235 York YO1 7YW Tel: 01904 624 993
Emotional Health by Bob Johnson James Nayler Foundation ISBN 1 904327 00 1
Conference: ‘Towards emotional health – views from the front line’ 10.00 am - 4.15 pm on Saturday 15 March 2003 Methodist Central Church St. Saviour gate York YO1 8NQ Tel: 01904 624 993
Charing Cross Hospital St. Dunstan's Road London W6 8RP Tel: 020 7589 5111
(D&SPD)
D&SPD Programme Home Office Room 204 50 Queen Anne’s Gate London SW1H 9AT Tel: 020 7273 2156
Mental Health Unit Home Office 50 Queen Anne's Gate London SW1H 9AT Tel: 020 7273 4029
Gower Street London WC1E 6BT Tel: 020 7679 2000
Tallahassee Florida 32306 USA Tel: 001 850 644 2525
Box PO22
Department of Biostatistics Institute of Psychiatry King's College London De Crespigny Park London SE5 8AF Tel: 020 7836 5454
| | | RELATED LINKS
´óÏó´«Ã½ Health ´óÏó´«Ã½i Health - Mental Health Reith Lectures 2003: The Emerging Mind
The ´óÏó´«Ã½ is not responsible for the content of external websites
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