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From: Hughes, James J. <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Jan 6, 2009 at 4:30 PM
Subject: [tt] Time: the Case for Cognitive Enhancement
To: [email protected], [email protected]


http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1869435,00.html

Tuesday, Jan. 06, 2009

Popping Smart Pills: the Case for Cognitive Enhancement

By Maia Szalavitz

A 40-year-old high-level e-commerce executive in the Pacific Northwest -
we'll call him Bob - felt he was losing his edge. Although his
colleagues saw him as a star, he feared he wouldn't be able to continue
the lightning pace and constant multitasking his job required. So, he
saw his doctor. Now Bob takes Adderall, a prescription amphetamine
ordinarily used to treat attention-deficit disorder.

"It gives me clarity of thinking and focus," says Bob. He credits the
drug for improving both his career and his personal relationships. "I am
still getting accolades," he says. He was initially wary of taking any
substance with a so-called black-box warning, he says, but after nine
months of using Adderall under close supervision by his doctor, he has
not developed an addiction, required a dose increase or had any other
adverse effects.

Welcome to the brave new world of "cognitive enhancement," a term that
typically refers to the use of attention- or memory-boosting
prescription drugs, such as Adderall, Ritalin or modafinil (Provigil),
along with other performance-raising medications, to improve
productivity. College kids have been doing it for years. About 7% of
U.S. university students report having taken stimulants "non-medically"
at least once, according to one 2005 study of nearly 11,000 students. On
some campuses - primarily private, elite schools - a full quarter of
students admit to "non-medical" drug use in the past year, mainly as an
attempt to improve grades.

Smart drugs are used widely off-campus as well: Fighter pilots take
stimulants to enhance alertness and cognition on critical missions; in
the civilian world, executives take beta-blockers to calm nerves, while
some time-pressed writers use wakefulness drugs, like modafinil, to make
deadlines. It's become commonplace enough that a group of seven leading
bioethicists and neuroscientists published an editorial in the
scientific journal Nature last month advocating the use of
performance-boosting drugs. "Cognitive enhancement has much to offer
individuals and society," the authors wrote, "and a proper societal
response will involve making enhancements available while managing their
risks."

Indeed, it would be hard to argue against promoting the use of an
intelligence-enhancer, if it were risk-free and available to everyone.
Imagine a legion of cancer researchers on smart drugs, racing toward a
cure. Or how about a better class of Wall Street executives, blessed
with improved thinking and wiser judgment? Based on the torrent of
negative public responses to the Nature editorial, however, many
Americans appear to regard enhancement as cheating, unnatural or as a
rationalization of drug abuse. But ask these bioethicists, and it's not
cheating at all - as long as everyone has fair and free access.

One problem is, of course, that access is neither fair nor free.
Businessmen like Bob get stimulant prescriptions from their doctors
(whether those prescriptions are legal is another matter; state laws
determine the nature of a "legitimate medical purpose" for controlled
drugs, and could choose to interpret cognitive enhancement as
"medical"). Students usually get stimulants from friends or family who
have legitimate prescriptions, which is illegal. In any case, one can't
access the drugs without some amount of expendable cash, which raises
the concern that they are available only to the wealthy.

Another worry is that societal acceptance will turn into coercion,
particularly in a cutthroat, winner-take-all environment. Jessie Klein,
an assistant professor of sociology at Adelphi University, says she
believes students give in to the pressure to take drugs, just to keep
up. "It makes more sense to me to transform this pernicious culture,
rather than discuss whether students should be able to legally take
drugs to compete," she says, adding that when minority students take
drugs, people call for "get tough" policies and crackdowns, but when
wealthy, white Ivy Leaguers do it, the discussion shifts to reducing the
legal consequences.

As for the health risks, researchers are only beginning to discover both
the possible benefits and the real hazards of prescription stimulants.
The effect of chronic, high doses of amphetamine is toxic; it can cause
psychosis, depression and cognitive deficits, which are sometimes
irreversible. That's why the street drug methamphetamine rightly has a
terrible reputation. But lasting problems don't usually emerge from the
therapeutic use of prescription stimulants - while the drugs do carry a
risk of increased blood pressure, which raises the odds of heart attack
and stroke, close medical monitoring reduces that risk.

Although recreational stimulant use can be addictive - about 10% to 20%
of people who use amphetamines to get high (particularly if they snort,
smoke or inject) will continue to use, despite negative consequences -
addiction rates are much lower when drugs like Ritalin or Adderall are
prescribed for ADHD. It's not clear whether the pattern of addiction
under medical supervision for enhancement would follow the former or the
latter - or whether it would even meet the bar for addiction. Medically
speaking, without the element of harm, regular drug use - or even
dependence - alone doesn't qualify as addiction.

"One has to distinguish between all kinds of issues here," says Michael
Gazzaniga, director of the Sage Center for the Study of Mind at the
University of California, Santa Barbara, and an author of the Nature
editorial. "Habits are not addictions, necessarily." Nonetheless,
because addicts tend to rationalize their use and because stimulants can
engender over-confidence, using drugs as enhancement can be problematic
for the minority of users who may develop a true addiction.

"If it were possible to call for a moratorium on cognitive enhancement
until the risks are better understood, that would obviously be the best
thing to do," says Martha Farah, director of the Center for Cognitive
Neuroscience at the University of Pennsylvania and another Nature
author, "but the genie is already out of the bottle."

The benefits of enhancement include increased alertness, focus and
improvement in some types of memory. Research shows that in normal
people stimulants consistently and significantly improve learning of
material that must be recalled days later - exactly what you want from a
drug when you are prepping for exams. The drugs even seem to improve
certain aspects of judgment. One study of 36 normal women and men found
that they were more likely to choose to delay gratification and receive
a larger monetary reward when given amphetamine, than settle for a
smaller amount of money immediately. Improvements in memory and
cognitive control have been reported in multiple studies, mainly using
Ritalin and amphetamines.

Interestingly, those who have the least ability in a particular area are
likely to see the greatest drug-related improvement. In fact, on some
tests of cognition, the smartest people actually showed performance
reductions, a result that may address some of the concerns over
"cheating": On tasks involving working memory and impulsivity,
stimulants had a leveling effect, allowing below-average performers to
catch up to their peers, not dominate. According to Farah, the typical
student user is actually not the overachieving brainiac, but a "white
male frat brother with a B average."

Anecdotes from the workforce, however, suggest that it's the
overachievers who tend to seek further enhancement. Dr. Gaby Cora, a
psychiatrist and life coach from Florida, says her patients are like
Bob. "They are extremely smart and very successful. We're not talking
about someone struggling to perform. I do organization, planning and
prioritizing - and lifestyle changes like exercise, relaxation, better
sleep, nutrition with patients first. But when I need to prescribe, I
do. My issue with all of this is that society pushes so much to maximize
production and performance that enhancement becomes normal."

That is perhaps the bioethicist's greatest concern - that cognitive
enhancement may be wrong not because it is physically risky or because
it creates an unlevel playing field, but because it redefines the nature
of human achievement itself. As Leon Kass wrote for the President's
Council on Bioethics in a 2003 report on enhancement, "We must live, or
try to live, as true men and women, accepting our finite limits,
cultivating our given gifts, and performing in ways that are humanly
excellent. To do otherwise is to achieve our most desired results at the
ultimate cost: getting what we seek or think we seek by no longer being
ourselves." That is, we cheat ourselves out of ownership of our own
success, and damage our sense of self.

Says Farah, "When my colleagues and I called for a more open mind and
rational debate on cognitive enhancement, we were not saying, 'Yeah,
let's everybody take these [controlled] substances.' What we are saying
is that these drugs are being used and it's very important for
physicians to talk to their patients and give them the information and
supervision they deserve and for more research to be done."

*a pseudonym


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