My picks from ScienceDaily (Psych edition)

Student Results Show Benefits Of Math And Science Partnerships:

Students' performance on annual math and science assessments improved in almost every age group when their schools were involved in a program that partners K-12 teachers with their colleagues in higher education.

The End Of Barroom Brawls: Study Shows Alcohol Can Reduce Aggression:

The link between alcohol and aggression is well known. What's not so clear is just why drunks get belligerent. What is it about the brain-on-alcohol that makes fighting seem like a good idea? And do all intoxicated people get more aggressive? Or does it depend on the circumstances?

Great Expectations: Why The Placebo Effect Varies From Person To Person:

Why do some people experience a "placebo effect" that makes them feel better when they receive a sham treatment they believe to be real -- while other people don't respond at all to the same thing, or even feel worse?

Erectile Dysfunction: Group Psychotherapy Can Help:

Taking part in group psychotherapy can help men who have erectile dysfunction to over come their problem, and adding sildenafil to group therapy was more effective that sildenafil alone. In addition, group psychotherapy was more effective than taking sildenafil on its own, a Cochrane Systematic Review has found.

Does Harry Potter Parody Government Response To Terror?:

Could Harry Potter be guarding the secrets of the British government's post 9/11 response to the terrorist threat" Judith Rauhofer of the University of Central Lancashire seems to think so. Rauhofer has made a study of JK Rowling's fictional child wizard and suggests, in a research paper published today in Inderscience's International Journal of Liability and Scientific Enquiry, that the author draws several subtle parallels with contemporary society. She believes this is part of the adult appeal of the books.

Evidence Found For Novel Brain Cell Communication:

An article published July 16, 2007, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, provides strong evidence for a novel type of communication between nerve cells in the brain. The findings may have relevance for the prevention and treatment of epilepsy, and possibly in the exploration of other aspects of brain functions, from creative thought processes to mental illnesses such as schizophrenia.

Rat Study Describes Brain Region Connected To Declarative Memory:

Research with experimental rats carried out by the Institute of Neuroscience of the UAB describes the brain region connected to how our declarative memory functions. According to this experiment, part of the prefrontal cortex plays a key role in the social transmission of food preference. Results from the research could be useful to find new treatment for diseases that affect the memory, such as Alzheimer's disease.

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I'm an anthropologist and a biologist, so really, I have no problem with the idea of a "placebo effect" in which people become convinced that they are being given an effective treatment and thus, because of that thought in their mind, improve. Editorial Note: I'm classifying this post as a "…
THE dangers of obesity are very well known. Being overweight is associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease and stroke, the two leading causes of death in the Western world. Gout is more common in overweight people, with the risk of developing the condition increasing in parallel…
tags: Harry Potter, Tales of Beedle the Bard, books, JK Rowling, book news [larger view] The Harry Potter news has been pouring in so fast that fans like me can hardly keep track of what keeps them awake at night due to excited anticipation. This time, the news is that the book of fairy tales,…
Image from: Alzheimer's Association Researchers Sanchez et al. from the Gladstone Institute, University of California San Franciso and Washington University School of Medicine discovered that an FDA-approved anti-convulsant medication used to treat epilepsy (levetiracetam) can also reverse memory…

Actually, the press-release about gap-junctions is pretty over the top. Compare it to the abstract of the original article:
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0705281104v1?maxtoshow=&HITS=1…
Gap junctions have been known for decades (especially from invertebrates) and been postulated to exist in mammaliajn cortex for ages. Nothing really new here other than that they finally found EM evidence for them (I mean NOT finding them would have been the gig deal!).
This might also be the reason for the track-1 submission to PNAS, where an academy member communicates the paper, effectively circum-navigating proper peer-review.