This article reviews research on cognition, language, organizational culture, brain, behavior, and evolution to posit the value of operating with a stable reference point based on cognitive accuracy and a rational bias. Drawing on rational-emotive behavioral science, social neuroscience, and cognitive organizational science on the one hand and a general model of brain and frontal lobe executive function on the other, I suggest implications for organizational success. Cognitive thought processes depend on specific brain structures functioning as effectively as possible under conditions of cognitive accuracy. However, typical cognitive processes in hierarchical business structures promote the adoption and application of subjective organizational beliefs and, thus, cognitive inaccuracies. Applying informed frontal lobe executive functioning to cognition, emotion, and organizational behavior helps minimize the negative effects of indiscriminate application of personal and cultural belief systems to business. Doing so enhances cognitive accuracy and improves communication and cooperation. Organizations operating with cognitive accuracy will tend to respond more nimbly to market pressures and achieve an overall higher level of performance and employee satisfaction.
Early in life, there is a delicate and critical balance aimed to maintain low hormone responses derived from the stress responsive hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA). However, in the infant rat hypothalamic corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH) stress responses to environmental events are clearly seen even though other elements of the HPA axis may have limited responses. In view of the role of CRH in mediating behavior associated with stress and anxiety, we considered the ontogeny and the effects of prolonged maternal deprivation (DEP) in brain areas that express CRH-related molecules outside the hypothalamus. We hypothesized that DEP would alter the ontogeny of CRH, CRH binding protein and CRH receptor 1 in prefrontal cortex, amygdala, septum and hippocampus, areas that are part of the CRH extra hypothalamic system, and that a differential modulation would be observed in response to restraint. We compared non-deprived animals to animals subjected to 24 h of DEP at 6, 12 and 18 days of life. We found (1) developmental patterns, which were idiosyncratic to the anatomical area examined, and (2) a temporal response of mRNA levels which was also site specific. The genomic changes are not always related to maternal deprivation status, in fact DEP enhanced, suppressed or had no consequence on the underlying ontogenic progression and restraint response of these CRH-related molecules. We conclude that the extra hypothalamic CRH system is a dynamic system responding to developmental and environmental demands challenging the basic assumption of stress hypo responsiveness in the infant rat. This modulation may have important repercussions on morphological organization and events leading to neuroprotection.
In times of national crisis, do scholars react more nobly than the man on the street? And, in particular, what about religious academiciansmen revered for their spiritual as well as intellectual insight? In time of war, are they able to rise au-dessus de la melée and maintain a dispassionate judgment, or do they descend into the marketplace and parrot the platitudes of the popular press.
Nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma is an uncommon variant of Hodgkin lymphoma. Progressive transformation of germinal centers has been associated with and can develop prior to, concurrent with, or after the diagnosis of nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma. We present a patient with a history of progressive transformation of germinal centers of the right parotid who presented 4 years later with ipsilateral parotid mass and cervical adenopathy. Knowledge of her previous diagnosis raised our concern for lymphoma, influenced our surgical management, and spared the patient additional surgery with risk of facial nerve injury inherent in revision parotidectomy.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.