Neuroscience
Journomarketing of Neurobollocks
 

Are you one of the few Anglophones who haven't yet heard about the frightening new fields of neuromarketing and neuroeconomics? Or that pop neuroscience is popular? Well thank god we have Steven Poole to set us straight!
Your brain on pseudoscience: the rise of popular neurobollocksThe “neuroscience” shelves in  bookshops are groaning. But are the works of authors such as Malcolm  Gladwell and Jonah Lehrer just self-help books dressed up in a lab coat? 
By Steven Poole
Published 06 September 2012An intellectual pestilence is upon us. Shop shelves groan with books  purporting to explain, through snazzy brain-imaging studies, not only  how thoughts and emotions function, but how politics and religion work,  and what the correct answers are to age-old philosophical controversies.  The dazzling real achievements of brain research are routinely pressed  into service for questions they were never designed to answer. This is  the plague of neuroscientism – aka neurobabble,  neurobollocks, or  neurotrash – and it’s everywhere.
It may be "everywhere" but it's been around for a while. But you wouldn't guess from reading Poole, who acts as if he's discovered this infectious plague all by himself. He hasn't noticed that many others before him have closely examined and criticized the misuse of brain science to sell self-help books or to advance an academic career. Even his neurowords are old, invented or popularized by other people. Raymond Tallis, for instance,  is known for neurotrash and neuroscientism. But even Tallis didn't coin these words.
1 Poole hasn't done his homework, which is unfortunate for someone who uses terms like "intellectual pestilence" as a casual insult. Perhaps he should know more about the fields he ridicules:
 Happily, a new branch of the neuroscienceexplains everything genre may  be created at any time by the simple expedient of adding the prefix  “neuro” to whatever you are talking about. Thus, “neuroeconomics” is the  latest in a long line of rhetorical attempts to sell the dismal science  as a hard one; “molecular gastronomy” has now been trumped in the  scientised gluttony stakes by “neurogastronomy”; students of Republican  and Democratic brains are doing “neuropolitics”; literature academics  practise “neurocriticism”. There is “neurotheology”, “neuromagic”  (according to Sleights of Mind, an amusing book about how  conjurors exploit perceptual bias) and even “neuromarketing”. 
Let's see, 
Wired had a 1999 piece on neurotheology, and Sharon Begley wrote about it in 2001 (Your Brain on Religion: Mystic visions or brain circuits at work?). Neuroeconomics has been around since the late 1990s, and has desperately tried to  distinguish itself from its more applied cousin (neuromarketing, a term coined in 2002).
2  And lots of people, apparently, are doing “neurocriticism” of various sorts (e.g., this blog and neuro-lit-crit and Critical Neuroscience).
But here's Poole again:
Hoping  it’s not too late to jump on the bandwagon, I have decided to announce  that I, too, am skilled in the newly minted fields of  neuroprocrastination and neuroflâneurship.
Why yes, it 
is a bit late to jump on the bandwagon...
Nonetheless, there are some wonderful quotes from Professor Paul Fletcher, who...
...gets “exasperated” by much popular coverage of neuroimaging research,  which assumes that “activity in a brain region is the answer to some  profound question about psychological processes. This is very hard to  justify given how little we currently know about what different regions  of the brain actually do.” Too often, he tells me in an email  correspondence, a popular writer will “opt for some sort of  neuro-flapdoodle in which a highly simplistic and questionable point is  accompanied by a suitably grand-sounding neural term and thus acquires a  weightiness that it really doesn’t deserve. In my view, this is no  different to some mountebank selling quacksalve by talking about the  physics of water molecules’ memories, or a beautician talking about  action liposomes.”
But these important points get buried in the bile inflicted on Jonah Lehrer and Malcolm Gladwell. Haven't they been beaten to death already? And it's not at all clear why he would go after distinguished cognitive scientist Dr. Art Markman and lump him in with the highly discredited agenda of neurolinguistic programming:
Mastering one’s own brain is also the key to survival in a dog-eat-dog  corporate world, as promised by the cognitive scientist Art Markman’s Smart Thinking: How to Think Big, Innovate and Outperform Your Rivals.  The field (or cult) of “neurolinguistic programming” (NLP) sells  techniques not only of self-overcoming but of domination over others.
Markman's book has different subtitles in the US and the UK, but it doesn't yammer on about neuro-anything, from what I can tell (and only mentions the word "brain" 7 times).
A number of neurobloggers and journalists have been tackling shoddy neuroscience for years, whether in journal articles or books or mainstream media.
3 The Neurocritic has extensive coverage of books 
[and other claims] by Louann Brizendine and Daniel Amen, for instance, along with copious criticism of media coverage and press releases that distort and exaggerate neuroscience findings.
Along with Mind Hacks, one of the major influences on this blog was Bad Neurojournalism (later renamed the Neuro-Journalism Mill), a collection of bad neuroscience journalism from 1998-2009, compiled by a comedian at the James S. McDonnell Foundation. A few examples (all definitely worth the click):
2000-10-28 Looking for That Brain Wave Called Love: Humanities Experts Use MRI's to Scan the Mind for the Locus of the Finer Feelings
2000-03-04 Men's Brains Have More Cells, Say Scientists Who Counted
2000-03-14 Just What's Going On Inside That Head of Yours? 4 
There's always room for snarky new neurocriticism, Mr. Poole, but please realize that simplified pop visions of oxytocin and dopamine and mirror neurons have been under siege for years.
FYI - 
Steven Poole is the author of the forthcoming book “You Aren’t What You Eat”, which will be published by Union Books in October.Footnotes1 For a short primer, we return to 2006 and the entertaining neuroword contest hosted by Neurofuture. Among the entries:
neurotrash: a group of attractive, progressive, and fashionable young neuroscientists of non-european heritage. (M. Miller)
neurosceptic: someone who doubts grand media claims made on behalf of neuroscience. (Vaughan Bell)
neurogibberish: Seemingly impressive jargon used by some neuroscientists to hide lack of real findings. (E.)
neuroessentialism:  the belief in, or tactic of, invoking  evidence, or merely terms, from  neuroscience to justify claims at the  psychological level. See also neuromysticism, neurobollocks. (Tom Stafford)
2 According to Paul W. Glimcher:
Neuroeconomics  is a purely academic discipline concerned with the basic  mechanisms of  decision-making. In contrast, Neuromarketing is a more  applied field  concerned with the application of brain scanning  technology to the  traditional goals and questions of interest of  marketers, both those in  academia and those in private industry. While  these two disciplines  are related, they are also very distinct. This is a  distinction often  overlooked by the popular media. 
3 Bad Science, BishopBlog, Daniel Bor, Ed Yong, LawsNeuroBlog, Mind Hacks, Neurobonkers, Neurophilosophy, Neuroskeptic, Neuron Culture, Oscillatory Thoughts, Scicurious, etc. 
[NOTE: I may keep adding to this list.]4 The seductive allure of fMRI was initially revealed by the 
New York Times in 2000:
The technology is seductively easy  to use, said Dr. Christopher Moore, a  postdoctoral fellow at  Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston who is  carrying out a number  of imaging studies. ''You can  think of an idea,  throw five friends into the scanner overnight and  write up your results  the next day. People don't have to think very  hard about what they're  doing.''
 -from Just What's Going On Inside That Head of Yours?
 By  SANDRA BLAKESLEE
Published: March 14, 2000 
  
- 
Link Feast
In case you missed them - 10 of the best psychology links from the past week: 1. Why We Need to Study the Brain’s Evolution in Order to Understand the Modern Mind - a must-read essay by Ferris Jabr for Scientific American. 2. Naomi Wolf’s new... 
  
- 
The Use And Abuse Of The Prefix Neuro- In The Decades Of The Brain
 Two Croatian academics with an anti-neuro ax to grind have written a cynical history of neuroword usage through the ages (Mazur & Rinčić, 2013). Actually, I believe the authors were being deliberately sarcastic (at times), since the article is... 
  
- 
The Decline Of Neurocriticism
The Brain From Beyond Infinity In the last post, I celebrated Eight Years of Neurocriticism but wistfully noted that this blog's popularity peaked in 2012. The traffic last year showed a decline to 2009-2010 levels. Why did this happen? And does it... 
  
- 
The Mainstreaming Of Neurocriticism
Will it strengthen the field of neuroscience? Or is it hurting its image in the eyes of the public? Or both?            Another article on the limits of neuroscience has appeared in a high-profile media outlet aimed at a general audience. In The... 
  
- 
Meet The Neuro Doubters
 Meet the “neuro doubters.” The neuro doubter may like neuroscience but does not like what he or she considers its bastardization by glib, sometimes ill-informed, popularizers. A gaggle of energetic and amusing, mostly anonymous, neuroscience... 
Neuroscience