OCD i guarantee that.
knew it the moment i met you in nawwwlins :) its all good though, i think probably most of us on the net 6-10 plus hours a day are maybe environmentally driven to that sort of behaviour. i notice it with myself shortly after a MAJOR world event, most likely driven by the panic and then its cnn.com, drudgereport.com, msnbc.com every like 10 - 15 minutes, JUST TO SEE WHATS GOING ON. i mean you cant have a conversation with me anymore, i know everything. and im not being pompous. we have the ability to be on the lifeblood of the world, that many hours a day, EVERY DAY, shit its amazing what it can do to us. i now, refrain myself from the Obsessive Compulsive reading/checking of email, through the help of GMAIL! no more outlook envelope, EVERY 60 seconds... and its helped a LOT! anyway, the point is... IANAD however, i think it might be interesting for you, although i dont know you very well, i think i picked up a lot in the 3 minutes we talked @ max, that you may have OCD, and drugs for that might be nice? i think there are ways to therapize away from OCD through behavioural changes. LARRY our resident shrink (Sorry man :) can probably throw down some "on list" ideas, since i would imagine a couple more than a handful of us, are in the same boat! let me put it into perspective for you.... i cant finish the first 10 pages of a GREAT (By others standards) book for any reason. i havent read a book since like 10th grade. adhd? maybe? or just boredom? tw On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:18:28 -0500, Michael Dinowitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Any time. I'm a news hound and need new data on a daily basis. My > 'obsession'. :) > > > these results fit within current models of intentionality and the > > frontal attentional control system. > > > > thanks for the reference Mike. > > > > larry > > > > > > On Mon, 17 Jan 2005 17:01:28 -0500, Michael Dinowitz > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > First biological test for ADHD unveiled > > > http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6886 > > > > > > The first biological test for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder > > has > > > been developed. The researchers claim the diagnosis, based on > > examination of > > > eye movements, is more than 93% accurate and could lead to earlier > > > identification and treatment for children with the condition. > > > > > > Scientists analysed the eye movements of 65 children aged between four > > and > > > six in Thessaloniki, Greece. About half of the children had been > > diagnosed > > > as having ADHD through the standard method of psychological assessment > > and > > > the use of questionnaires. > > > > > > The children were placed in front of a computer screen while wearing > > special > > > goggles to monitor their eye movements and asked to use their eyes to > > > "lock-on to" and follow spots of light that traversed the screen during > > a > > > 10-minute test. > > > > > > "Children with ADHD show large difference in eye movements compared with > > > normal children. For example, those without ADHD could follow the light > > spot > > > for 30 seconds to as much as five minutes, whereas the children with the > > > disorder could only follow the stimulus for about three to five > > seconds," > > > says Giorgos Pavlidis at University of Brunel, UK, who led the study. > > > > > > The group analysed eye movements according to various criteria, these > > > included fixation on the stimulus, saccades - jerking between two focal > > > points - and smooth pursuit. The computer was able to correctly diagnose > > > 93.1% of the children. > > > Early intervention > > > > > > "Children as young as three years old could benefit from the test. It > > could > > > reliably identify those children who have ADHD early on so that > > effective > > > intervention could be given to reduce loss of confidence and other > > > behavioural and psychological problems," Pavlidis told New Scientist. > > > > > > Caroline Hensby, of the UK's ADHD support group, Adders, welcomed the > > > research, saying the test could be a valuable addition to current > > testing > > > procedures. "It would give sufferers a lot more confidence in their > > > diagnosis knowing that they had actually taken a biological test, as > > opposed > > > to just talking to someone - it would make the diagnosis more > > legitimate," > > > she says. > > > > > > "Also, it's very difficult for someone with ADHD to sit down and > > concentrate > > > for two hours - the length of current test period - so this short, > > > ten-minute test would be far better." > > > Responding to Ritalin > > > > > > And Pavlidis hopes the test could be used for prognosis in the future: > > "Some > > > patients with ADHD respond well to drugs such as Ritalin, and these > > patients > > > show differences in eye movements from other ADHD sufferers both before > > and > > > after taking the drug - in fact, after taking Ritalin, the patients who > > > respond well to it show normal eye movements. I hope to be able to > > construct > > > a computer test that can classify those ADHD patients who will respond > > to > > > drugs." > > > > > > Pavlidis estimates that between 3% and 7% of the population has ADHD, > > but > > > believes 80% of cases remain undiagnosed. > > > > > > It is not known how eye neurology is affected in ADHD, but Pavlidis > > points > > > out that a symptom of the disorder is premature action - acting before > > > thinking - and eye movements in those with the disorder are also > > premature. > > > "The children's eyes jerk across before the light stimulus has moved," > > he > > > explains. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| Purchase RoboHelp from House of Fusion, a Macromedia Authorized Affiliate and support the CF community. http://www.houseoffusion.com/banners/view.cfm?bannerid=59 Message: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=i:5:142930 Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/threads.cfm/5 Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=s:5 Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5 Donations & Support: http://www.houseoffusion.com/tiny.cfm/54
