schizophrenia
What causes auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia?
There's finally new insight into why some people with schizophrenia experience auditory hallucinations, hearing voices and sounds when there are none. A new study in PLOS Biology shows that, in schizophrenia, some people experience "broken" and "noisy" motor signals when they're preparing to speak, which causes signals to misfire in the brain. This could open up new doorways for schizophrenia treatment.
"Some patients are really resistant to drugs — maybe that's because it's hard to modulate the function network [with them]," the study's lead author told STAT's Timmy Broderick. "If our theory is right, then using a non-invasive neuromodulation technique can alleviate the hallucinations."
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podcast
Who is President Biden's health care AI czar?
What does he do? And why do some folks believe he has one of the toughest jobs in D.C.? We talk about all that and more on this week's episode of "The Readout LOUD," STAT's biotech podcast. Our colleague Mohana Ravindranath joins us to talk about Micky Tripathi, charged with coordinating how AI is used across different government agencies and more broadly across the health care industry.
We also chat about some important biotech study readouts due before the end of the year, a new, well-funded obesity company, and the successful serial CEO running it. Finally, Adam and Allison lament the fact that Elaine hasn't yet watched the first episode of this season's "Great British Baking Show."
Listen here.
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