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Aug 10, 2018
BPS Digest
PRESS RELEASE

College of Medicine professors Angelina Sutin and Antonio Terracciano contributed to research on the potential links between IQ, health and aging. The research was published in the academic journal Intelligence this month and featured in a British Psychological Society Research Digest article.

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Aug 13, 2018
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

The members of the Class of 2022 were officially welcomed into their chosen profession during the Florida State University College of Medicine’s White Coat Ceremony on Aug. 10.

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Aug 15, 2018
SheMD
PRESS RELEASE

Alumna Lexie Mannix (M.D., '14) published a post on her blog, sheMD, about her journey to medicine and how perseverance and adaptation led her to the FSU College of Medicine.

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Aug 21, 2018
Cape Coral Breeze
PRESS RELEASE

Eight first-year family medicine residents started seeing patients as part of the Florida State University College of Medicine Family Medicine Residency Program at Lee Health July 30. Based at Lee Memorial Hospital, the program was created to abate a national shortage of primary care physicians.

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Aug 22, 2018
Give 'active-assisted stretching' a try
PRESS RELEASE

FSU College of Medicine professor Judy Muller-Delp conducted research that suggests that static muscle stretching performed regularly can increase blood flow to muscles in the lower leg, helping individuals who struggle to walk due to pain or lack of mobility.

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Sep 05, 2018
San Diego Union-Tribune
PRESS RELEASE

Joseph Gabriel, associate professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine, wrote an article for The Conversation about the history of opiate addiction, pain and race in the US in mid-June. The article was also published in The Washington Post and the Chicago Tribune and later ran in the San Diego Union-Tribune in early September.

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Sep 11, 2018
Business Insider
PRESS RELEASE

FSU College of Medicine Professor James Olcese previously discovered that nightly release of melatonin is a cause of contractions in pregnant women. In effort to reduce preterm contractions in women, he developed a light-emitting sleep mask to inhibit the release of melatonin. The technology is marketed and developed by his organization KynderMed and is beginning a clinical study at the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine at the University of South Florida, and Tampa General Hospital.

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Sep 13, 2018
AAMC News
PRESS RELEASE

With Hurricane Florence heading toward the East Coast, AAMC News reviewed lessons learned by medical schools and teaching hospitals during 2017's hurricane season. FSU College of Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty talks about making resources available to med students, staff, and more in the face of a storm.

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Sep 17, 2018
Tallahassee Democrat
PRESS RELEASE

College of Medicine Professor Rob Glueckauf and his team have devoted the last four years to ACTS2, the African-American Alzheimer's Caregiver Training and Support Project 2. The project has brought relief to nearly 100 distressed African-Americans providing care for a loved one with dementia, and it is expanding its outreach in Western Panhandle counties thanks to a $118,000 grant.

Press Release

Inside The Teenage Brain: New Studies Explain Risky Behavior

 CONTACT: Doug Carlson, FSU College of Medicine
(850) 645-1255; doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu

By Doug Carlson
August 2014

INSIDE THE TEENAGE BRAIN: NEW STUDIES EXPLAIN RISKY BEHAVIOR

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — It’s common knowledge that teenage boys seem predisposed to risky behaviors. Now, a series of new studies is shedding light on specific brain mechanisms that help to explain what might be going on inside juvenile male brains.

Florida State University College of Medicine neuroscientist Pradeep Bhide brought together some of the world’s foremost researchers in a quest to explain why teenagers — boys, in particular — often behave erratically.

The result is a series of 19 studies that approached the question from multiple scientific domains, including psychology, neurochemistry, brain imaging, clinical neuroscience and neurobiology. The studies are published in a special volume of Developmental Neuroscience, “Teenage Brains: Think Different?

“Psychologists, psychiatrists, educators, neuroscientists, criminal justice professionals and parents are engaged in a daily struggle to understand and solve the enigma of teenage risky behaviors,” Bhide said. “Such behaviors impact not only the teenagers who obviously put themselves at serious and lasting risk but also families and societies in general.

“The emotional and economic burdens of such behaviors are quite huge. The research described in this book offers clues to what may cause such maladaptive behaviors and how one may be able to devise methods of countering, avoiding or modifying these behaviors.”

An example of findings published in the book that provide new insights about the inner workings of a teenage boy’s brain:

• Unlike children or adults, teenage boys show enhanced activity in the part of the brain that controls emotions when confronted with a threat. Magnetic resonance scanner readings in one study revealed that the level of activity in the limbic brain of adolescent males reacting to threat, even when they’ve been told not to respond to it, was strikingly different from that in adult men.

• Using brain activity measurements, another team of researchers found that teenage boys were mostly immune to the threat of punishment but hypersensitive to the possibility of large gains from gambling. The results question the effectiveness of punishment as a deterrent for risky or deviant behavior in adolescent boys.

• Another study demonstrated that a molecule known to be vital in developing fear of dangerous situations is less active in adolescent male brains. These findings point toward neurochemical differences between teenage and adult brains, which may underlie the complex behaviors exhibited by teenagers.

“The new studies illustrate the neurobiological basis of some of the more unusual but well-known behaviors exhibited by our teenagers,” Bhide said. “Stress, hormonal changes, complexities of psycho-social environment and peer-pressure all contribute to the challenges of assimilation faced by teenagers.

“These studies attempt to isolate, examine and understand some of these potential causes of a teenager’s complex conundrum. The research sheds light on how we may be able to better interact with teenagers at home or outside the home, how to design educational strategies and how best to treat or modify a teenager’s maladaptive behavior.”

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Bhide, the Jim and Betty Ann Rodgers Eminent Scholar Chair of Developmental Neuroscience and director of the Center for Brain Repair at the FSU College of Medicine, conceived and edited the book. His co-editors were Barry Kasofsky and B.J. Casey, both of Weill Cornell Medical College at Cornell University. The book was published by Karger Medical and Scientific Publisher of Basel, Switzerland.