Continuing her campaign warning of the dangers of modern technology in terms of their effects on the vulnerable brains of the young, the British neuroscientist and Baroness has written another article. This is the latest of many. None of them have been in peer reviewed academic journals.
This one's behind the Great Times Paywall so I can't link to it, but it's called Are video games taking away our identities?
The first part of the article is hard to argue against. Either you'll agree with it or you won't. Personally, videogames as Greenfield describes them bear little resemblance to any games that I've played recently. Similarly for her account of the Internet. But maybe this rings true for some:
Screen images do not depend for their impact on seeing one thing in
terms of anything else. Their premium lies invariably in their raw
sensory content... we are perhaps heading towards a much weaker sense of identity by
engaging in a world where we are the passive recipient of senses and
where there is no fixed narrative of past and future but an atomised
thrill of the moment. One could even suggest that the constant self-centred readout on
Twitter belies a more childlike insecurity, an existential crisis.
Greenfield then moves into discussing the brain, and this is where the science comes in. This is her "home turf" - she's Professor of physiology at Oxford. Yet it's a shambles.
There is one alarm bell ringing, which suggests that increasing 2D screen existence may be having undesirable effects: it is the threefold increase over the past decade in prescriptions for drugs for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
While this could be due to changes in doctors’ prescribing procedures, or indeed to a greater recognition and medicalisation of attentional problems, a third possibility could indeed be that if the young brain is exposed from the outset to a world of fast action-reaction, of instant new screen images flashing up with each press of a key, then such rapid interchange might lead to a shorter attention span.
The human condition can be basically divided into two alternating modes, first described by Euripedes... the rational “bread force”, characterised by a strong cognitive take on the world — a personalised past, present and future, in turn related to an active prefrontal cortex and lower levels of the brain chemical dopamine; and the “wine force”, more the state of young children or those adults indulging in “letting themselves go”, in situations perhaps involving wine, women and song, where a strong sensory environment demands less reflection, more passive reaction.
...An increase in physiological arousal can be linked to excessive release of dopamine. Could the screen experience be tilting this ancient balance in favour of the more infantile, senses-driven brain state?Greenfield says that high dopamine and low prefrontal cortex activity is associated with irrationality and a deficit in attention. Video games are causing a flood of dopamine and causing ADHD. That would make sense, if ADHD was caused by too much dopamine, and if drugs for ADHD reduced dopamine release.
The problem is that it's the exact opposite. Drugs for ADHD increase dopamine release and ADHD is widely believed (although it's controversial) to be caused by a dopamine deficit.
Greenfield then says "We know too that dopamine suppresses the activity of neurons in the prefrontal cortex", but this is a serious oversimplification. Dopamine has complex effects on target neurons. It can inhibit firing, but it can also excite it. It all depends on the conditions. Here's what the authors of an influential scientific review said in 2004: "It is agreed by most researchers is that dopamine is a neuromodulator and is clearly not an excitatory or inhibitory neurotransmitter"
Some say that dopamine helps to "tune" the prefrontal by increasing the signal to noise ratio - more signal, less noise. Here's one of the most cited papers about dopamine and the PFC: Cognitive deficit caused by regional depletion of dopamine in prefrontal cortex of rhesus monkey.
Remember that drugs for ADHD like Ritalin, which are sometimes used illicitly by students without that disorder to help them focus and concentrate, cause dopamine release. If Greenfield were right, it would be the exact opposite.
...[other] people characterised by an underactive prefrontal cortex are those with schizophrenia, this time not due to physical damage but rather a chemical imbalance, in particular an excessive amount of the transmitter dopamine. In schizophrenia, like children, the patient is easily distracted, cannot interpret proverbs, is not strong on metaphor but takes the world literally; it is a vibrant world that can implode on, and overwhelm, the fragile firewall of the schizophrenic mindset.This again is a serious simplification. Actually, you don't need to be a neuroscientist to work that out. Just recall the earlier bit: Greenfield has said that ADHD is caused by too much dopamine leading to an underactive prefrontal cortex. Now she says that schizophrenia is the same. So why are the symptoms of ADHD completely different from schizophrenia?
Why is it, in fact, that Ritalin and similar dopamine releasing drugs help with ADHD, but can make schizophrenia worse?
As a neuroscientist, I can tell you that we don't really know what's going on with dopamine in ADHD or schizophrenia. There's decent evidence that dopamine is involved in schizophrenia, but not in any straightforward sense. Schizophrenia is now believed to be linked to reduced dopamine in the prefrontal cortex, and too much in other areas.
As for ADHD, remember: the leading theory is that it's about too little dopamine. Not too much.
The only disease that we know certainly is associated with too little dopamine is Parkinson's. Contrary to Greenfield's theory, people with Parkinson's often have cognitive and mood problems as well as the better known difficulties with movements. They're not super intelligent, prefrontal-cortex-wielding geniuses.
I appreciate that an opinion piece in the Times is never going to be a rigorously argued scientific paper, but the fact that Greenfield's article contains several claims which are the exact opposite of the truth (or at least of current scientific thinking) calls her credibility into serious question.

39 comments:
well done, good work on exposing
Schizophrenia is another form of ASD. It's a step beyond.
Or better still, Autism/Aspergers/HFA and Schizophrenia all stem from the same cause, disruption of the forming of the white matter resulting in a different construction of the grey matter due to over/under stimulation caused by the variant wiring during gestation and added environmental feedback after birth.
Scientists can search till they see crosseyed for all kinds of tertiary reasons but that's just looking at the endresult trying to go backwards. Hopeless and pointless exercise in futility for schizophrenia but keeps people occupied and who knows what other stuff may come of it. The arms race gave us all kinds of handy stuff as well, so perhaps this kind of research leads to some unexpected cure for stupidity.
Which migfht come in handy for Mz Greenfield who hasn't got a clue. Proof anyone with a good retentive memory but devoid of talent can get a degree.
Eloquently argued, as always.
As a cultural theory person I think it's fascinating to see how these supposedly neuroscientific claims are both ideologically loaded and also eerie resonant with a body of literary and cultural studies scholarship that uses schizophrenia as a metahpor to interpret changes in the structures of communication in postmodern culture. This statement, for example:
"In schizophrenia, like children, the patient is easily distracted, cannot interpret proverbs, is not strong on metaphor but takes the world literally; it is a vibrant world that can implode on, and overwhelm, the fragile firewall of the schizophrenic mindset."
...sounds like it is straight out of an undergraduate essay "applying" Fredric Jameson's account of "postmodern schizophrenia." The whole issue of how clinical concepts are used in cultural theory, and with what effects, is a discussion for another time, but the fact that these cariacatures are presented to Times readers as though they were "scientific" facts strikes me as yet another reason to find her claims thoroughly dangerous.
Perhaps Dr. Greenfield is having her own neurological problems.
but the fact that Greenfield's article contains several claims which are the exact opposite of the truth (or at least of current scientific thinking) calls her credibility into serious question.
No. Actually. What she says is a confusion of current scientific thinking that may wrongly reverse a mechanism.
You have already said you don't know what is the case in this complex matter.
What she says cannot therefor be "the exact opposite of the truth". Who is playing fast and lose here I wonder?
you write
" That would make sense, if ADHD was caused by too much dopamine, and if drugs for ADHD reduced dopamine release.
The problem is that it's the exact opposite. Drugs for ADHD increase dopamine release and ADHD is widely believed (although it's controversial) to be caused by a dopamine deficit."
It all depends on context, during development for example excess dopamine may cause apoptosis to dopaminergic neurons and therefore lack of dopamine later in life.
I am not saying that Greenfield is correct. But it is also not " the exact opposite" we just don't really know.
I'm happy to accept what you say, but I haven't the time to read your whole argument. Couldn't you have summarised it in a single paragraph at the start?
Thanks
Thanks for the good debunking. Will link. Cheers, Thomas
Adam: Well, that's why I said "truth (or at least of current scientific thinking)"
I'm not saying that the currently accepted theories are correct but there is evidence behind them. Greenfield can't just come along and assert that the exact opposite is true, with no evidence.
It's a complex issue but that's not carte blanche to say whatever you like.
guy: True, but Greenfield doesn't go into that issue either, she just asserts, as a fact, that things are a certain way.
For the record I'd be unhappy if someone asserted the "orthodox" view as a fact in a newspaper article as well, because it would be giving some fairly messy provisional theories the status of hard truths which is misleading since the real picture is extremely complicated. But to assert unorthodox views as fact is even worse.
Another key unsubstantiated claim in the pipeline? http://www.thespoof.co.uk/news/spoof.cfm?headline=s5i101550#this
"ADHD" simply DOES NOT and CANNOT EXIST in ANY WAY WHATSOEVER. This is extremely obvious. This is only my first problem with all of this above :)
Her article could give the impression that Euripides may have used the pieces of language - "prefrontal cortex", "brain chemical" and "dopamine." I can give you an almost 100 per cent guarantee that he did not.
What a spin job.
You left out the key event in the chain of events. Stimulation of dopamine (as in any addiction process) leads to a decline of dopamine signalling in the striatum. It's called addiction.
As any addiction specialist will tell you, a chronic decline in dopamine (first study below) signalling from striatal innervation leads to a corresponding decline in frontal cortex functioning (second study below).
SEE: Reduced striatal dopamine D2 receptors in people with Internet addiction
An increasing amount of research has suggested that Internet addiction is associated with abnormalities in the dopaminergic brain system.Consistent with our prediction, individuals with Internet addiction showed reduced levels of dopamine D2 receptor availability in subdivisions of the striatum including the bilateral dorsal caudate and right putamen. This finding contributes to the understanding of neurobiological mechanism of Internet addiction.
SEE: Microstructure Abnormalities in Adolescents with Internet Addiction Disorder
Euripides is misspelt in this piece, though it is a quotation
The thing is, what she is saying may be correct, but probably not to that extent.
Her idea seems to be that an environment requiring short attention spans lead to ADHD and this is caused by changes in higher dopamine signaling in the prefrontal cortex.
Sounds like that could be made into a testable hypothesis. There is probably already papers published around it.
The problem, I believe, lies with communicating science to the public. There is no room for a review in dopamine's role in ADHD or the prefrontal cortex. Unlike a journal article, there is no mention of contrary evidence.
Also "An increase in physiological arousal can be linked to excessive release of dopamine" well then could any activity which causes increased arousal (eg stress and excitement) can be "linked" to ADHD.
It seems the scientific community really discourages this type of thinking - opinions not published in peer reviewed journals with little evidence to back them up. Especially if they come from a scientist. And I agree if it's being used as a 'conclusion'. But this could lead to some good hypotheses if it's recognised as ideas rather than theory. Who knows, maybe she is putting this out there to somehow influence the granting bodies to approve some of her grants so she can test this stuff?
But really, this is no excuse for Greenfield who is supposed to be an expert in communicating science to the public.
Anonymous: "What a spin job. You left out the key event in the chain of events. Stimulation of dopamine (as in any addiction process) leads to a decline of dopamine signalling in the striatum. It's called addiction."
I didn't leave that out, Greenfield did. She doesn't mention that at all. She clearly states that video games are causing high dopamine and that this is bad per se, not because it leads indirectly to lower dopamine.
The idea that videogames are addictive is another kettle of fish. Maybe they are, that's not what her article was about.
I'm not sufficiently au fait with dopaminergic transmission to be able to argue the toss there, but to me a more fundamental problem with Prof. Greenfield's argument is this bit:
There is one alarm bell ringing, which suggests that increasing 2D screen existence may be having undesirable effects: it is the threefold increase over the past decade in prescriptions for drugs for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Is she seriously suggesting that the only thing that has changed over the last decade (and thus must be responsible for increased prescribing of ADHD medication) is the proliferation of screens? Because that's really the only way I can interpret this.
I mean, it's not as though medicine's prescribing practices change over time. Or educational practices. Or people's diet. Or environmental contaminants. Or … etc.
As someone with a cog-neuro background who was genuinely inspired by Greenfield in her early 'public understanding of science' days, I'm starting to find all this a bit embarrassing.
Agree with Chris A on that point. Diagnostic changes, increased awareness of ADHD etc could have led to increase. Greenfield makes the same mistake the anti-vaccine groups did, when they attempted to explain a rise in autism to MMR use.
It does occur to me, though, that their might be a point there. Or perhaps the same point apparently intended but approached from the other side. I don't know a great deal about the subject, so please do tell me if this is nonsense. Could it be possible that if the brain gets used to lots of dopamine, it doesn't produce as much and/or needs more to function, so that the person could only focus well when doing activities that cause a lot of dopamine to be released?
Does anyone else think her desire to label twitter users childlike may stem from the popular hashtag #Greenfieldism ? Chris A, check it out:
http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/greenfieldism#.TrkmHFavPUA
She's just another woo-peddler, just with academic qualifications.
This is what happens when pseudoscience is taken seriously. To be honest, The times, who printed this pseudo-scientific garbage, should really not print stories like this, full of lies and subjectively motivated deceit.
It makes them look incredibly amateurish.
One possibility is that the triumphant surge of dopamine on gaining her title had the effect of frying her frontal lobes, so that their output is pathetic gibberish.
That's a good point actually. Down with dopamine!
Greenfield sounds like an Aspie trying to grok the world with rigid reductionistic neuroscience.
"In schizophrenia, like children, the patient is easily distracted, cannot interpret proverbs, is not strong on metaphor but takes the world literally; it is a vibrant world that can implode on, and overwhelm, the fragile firewall of the schizophrenic mindset."
This type of "schizophrenia" sounds like Asperger's disorder to me. Perhaps she has agnosagnosia as well; it would be typical for the condition and explains some of her outsider art.
Nice try neurocritic. You either know nothing about addiction neuroscience and or you are spinning. You choose.
Several recent research studies have found that that Internet/video game addiction causes the same fundamental changes found in drug addicted brain: sensitization, desensitization, and reduce frontal cortex volume/activity.
The hallmmark of all addictions is a decline in baseline dopamine and dopamine D2 receptors. Both are stronly correlated to ADHD. A excerpt from this research related article - ADHD Brain Chemistry Clue Found: Dopamine Receptors and Transporters
"In conclusion, these findings show a reduction in dopamine synaptic markers in the dopamine reward pathway midbrain and accumbens region of participants with ADHD that were associated with measures of attention," the authors write.
Please get up to speed on the latest brain research on Internet/video game addiction by reading the following:
1. Reduced striatal dopamine D2 receptors in people with Internet addiction (2011)
2. Enhanced Reward Sensitivity and Decreased Loss Sensitivity in Internet Addicts: An fMRI Study During a Guessing Task. (2011)
3. Microstructure Abnormalities in Adolescents with Internet Addiction Disorder (2011)
4. Confirmation of the Three Factor Model of Problematic Internet Use on Off Line Adolescent and Adult Samples. (2011) Neurosci Lett. 2011 Jul 20;499(2):114-8.
5. Male Internet Addicts Show Impaired Executive Control Ability Evidence From A Color-Word: Stroop Task. (2011)
6. Internet Addiction Among Students of the Medical University of Białystok. (2011) Comput Inform Nurs. 2011 Jun 21.
7. Changes in Cue-Induced, Prefrontal Cortex Activity with Video-Game Play (2010)
8. Internet addiction: hours spent online, behaviors and psychological symptoms. Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2011 Oct 28.
You're not engaging with my point. I agree with all that. But Greenfield, in her article, said the exact opposite i.e. that ADHD is caused by too much dopamine.
"[having just proposed that video games could have increased ADHD by] such rapid interchange might lead to a shorter attention span...The human condition can be basically divided into two alternating modes, first described by Euripedes in his Bacchae as “bread” and “wine” forces: the rational “bread force”, characterised by a strong cognitive take on the world — a personalised past, present and future, in turn related to an active prefrontal cortex and lower levels of the brain chemical dopamine; and the “wine force”, more the state of young children or those adults indulging in “letting themselves go”, in situations perhaps involving wine, women and song, where a strong sensory environment demands less reflection, more passive reaction...An increase in physiological arousal can be linked to excessive release of dopamine...We know too that dopamine suppresses the activity of neurons in the prefrontal cortex..."
You're arguing against Greenfield, not me.
If you:
1) agree with my points,
2) understand that excessive dopamine over time may lead to behavioral addictions,
3) understand that all addictions involve a decline in frontal cortex activity and dopamine signaling
4) have seen the research confirming these same brain changes in "internet addicts"
5) undertsand that ADHD involves a decline in dopamine siganlling and frontal cortex activity,
....why are you arguing against Greenfields premise?
Why are you not filling in the gap she omitted, so readers can better grasp the science?
Greenfield is correct in this quote you dismissed - "too much dopamine leading to an underactive prefrontal cortex."
In addiction processes, excess dopamine leads to a decline in dopamine signalling to the prefrontal cortex, with a corresponding decline in prefrontal activity/gray matter:
Gray Matter Abnormalities In Internet Addiction: A Voxel-Based Morphometry Study (2009)
BACKGROUND:
This study aims to investigate brain gray matter density (GMD) changes in adolescents with Internet addiction (IA) using voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analysis on high-resolution T1-weighted structural magnetic resonance images.
METHODS:
Eighteen IA adolescents and 15 age- and gender-matched healthy controls took part in this study. High-resolution T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging scans were performed on the two groups. VBM analysis was used to compare the GMD between the two groups.
RESULTS:
Compared with healthy controls, IA adolescents had lower GMD in the left anterior cingulate cortex, left posterior cingulate cortex, left insula, and left lingual gyrus.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our findings suggested that brain structural changes were present in IA adolescents, and this finding may provide a new insight into the pathogenesis of IA.
@Anonymous: Maybe this is a misunderstanding. Neuroskeptic is not saying that the dopamin level cannot be increased (and PFC activity decreased) by being addicted to video games. He is not arguing about addiction. He is just saying that Greenfield's point is not necessarily true, and evidence points towards the opposite, because Ritalin causes more dopamin availability. Of course you may say: But addiction research has taught us...
That is not the point, because playing video games does not equal ADHD and ADHD does not equal addiction. There may be ADHD patients without addiction and the may be addicts without ADHD. This is not about addiction.
I might be mistaken, but I don't read Greenfield's article as if it was about addiction, but about the adverse effects of playing video games on normal brain function, and as video games causing ADHD, something that is not grounded on scientific evidence.
Now are you suggesting that ADHD actually is a consequence of addiction? I don't think this is true.
It's both dopamine D2 receptors and frontal cortex activity that decrease with Internet addiction (not dopamine increasing).
And yes, I am saying that many who were diagnosed with ADD/ADHD experience resolution of ADHD symptoms as their brains recover from Internet addictions. I run a forum where people recovering from Internet addiction, such as video games, congregate. I've seen it for years. The science I cited confirmed as much through brain scans and written tests.
Anonymous: There's definitely a misunderstanding happening here. So far as I can tell, at no point in her article does Greenfield assert that this increased dopamine subsequently results in sensitization and decreased receptors. Neuroskeptic is simply breaking down her faulty argument based on the information SHE provided. Congratulations on your knowledge of addiction science; it doesn't mean you can make assumptions about what Greenfield maybe meant to possibly imply with her piece, unless you're a psychic or something (in which case, Neuroskeptic should really get on that).
How about the first part of her claim, that video games cause dopamine release?
If it's true it suggests that people with ADHD symptoms could use video games as self-therapy. Which in turn would predict a correllation between video game playing and ADHD in the population, but with reversed causality compared to Greenfield's claims.
Hi,
I'm 27 and started taking Adderall when I was 25; I have a prescription for 2x10mg a day. I can tell you with complete honesty that it has changed my life. Everything that was a mess before (my entire life) is now completely managed and manged well. I've taken some time off work and am back in school and I can tell you that my second degree is a lot more impressive than my first. I'm getting B+'s and A's and my focus, drive and attention-span are all working full steam. I can actually understand now how everyone else in school when I was a kid, could at least manage to get some, if not all, of their schoolwork done. Ironically, I played video games up until I started taking Adderall, and now I read, do school work, workout, walk my neighbour's dog, iron my clothes and keep my place clean instead of playing video games and living like a slob like I did for the first 25 years of my life...
Good work on critiquing Greenfield. Everyone posting here might also be interested in the long-running work of Professor Valerie Walkerdine on computer-games and 'addiction', where she analyses how in research the games are seen to lead to 'addiction' particularly in working-class boys, but not middle-class boys... Walkerdine was also the researcher who debunked the 1970s nonsense (now re-emerging in different but related forms) on women's brains not being able to do mathematics (see her classic 'Counting Girls Out'. As Walkerdine's (and related) work demonstrates, we cannot even start to consider possible neurological mechanisms when the research is so based on assumptions about gender/ class/ education etc etc.
Well if excessive dopamine causes receptor sensitivity to diminish and or has a different effect on different types of receptors (some rewarding behavior and some eliciting behavior or craving for a behavior) by increasing sensitivity in some while decreasing it in others I can see how irregular patterns of excitation/craving could lead to adhd like symptoms.
Well done, But there's one thing that bothers me. Stephen Stahl claims that circuits might be overactivated, would it be possible for instance that Prefrontal Cortex could be overactivated and therefore ceases to work ? I just want to exclude that eventual possibility before going all the way sawing Greenfields sayings to the ankles.
And another thing. Why is a noradrenaline reuptake inhibitator like Atomoxetine given and assumely working on ADHD ?
This is interesting as well
http://www.nature.com/neuro/journal/v5/n2/abs/nn798.html
Dopamine D2 linked to Dominance.
According to recent research by Ofcom, 37% of adults and 60% of teens admit to being ‘highly addicted’ to their smartphones, with users checking their smartphones on average, 34 times a day. Additionally, 51% of adults and 65% of teens use their smartphones while socializing with others, and 22% and 47% respectively, confess to answering their smartphones even while on the toilet.
So the International 'Moodoff Day’ is encouraging people around the world to avoid using smartphones for a few hours on February 26. The organization is urging adults and teenagers to spend from 5 a.m. to 10 a.m. that day without using their smartphone. This events will celebrate each year on last Sunday of February.
if you feel you could benefit from a morning without smartphones and mobile devices and want to encourage others to follow suit, go to www.MoodOffDay.org and pledge your support. You can even post your personal experiences of smartphone addiction or upload funny images showing smartphone addicts in action at www.facebook.com/MoodOffDay .
Moodoff Day is aiming to raise awareness of smart phone addiction and to minimise the impact on relationships, work/life balance, reduce risk of injury in traffic and improve quality of life.
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