4.7 • 7.3K Ratings
🗓️ 11 September 2023
⏱️ 137 minutes
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Andrew Huberman, Professor of Neurobiology at Stanford University and host of the Huberman Lab podcast joins us in a special journal club episode. Peter and Andrew each present a recent paper that sparked their interests, delving into the findings, dissecting their significance, discussing potential confounders and limitations, and exploring remaining questions. Importantly, they share their methodologies for comprehending research studies, providing valuable insights for listeners to navigate this process independently. Peter presents an epidemiological study reevaluating a noteworthy metformin result that intrigued the anti-aging community, leading to discussions on metformin's geroprotective potential (or lack thereof) and the current lack of aging biomarkers. Andrew introduces a paper examining how our beliefs about the medications we take influence their biological effects, distinguishing the "belief effect" from a placebo effect and highlighting its exciting implications for the future.
We discuss:
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0:00.0 | Hey everyone, welcome to the Drive Podcast. I'm your host, Peter Atilla. This podcast, |
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0:58.5 | PeterAtillaMD.com forward slash subscribe. Welcome to a special episode of the Drive. This |
1:07.4 | episode is actually a dual episode with Andrew Huberman, where we are going to be releasing |
1:11.4 | our conversation on both the Huberman Lab Podcast and on the drive. In this episode, |
1:16.7 | Andrew and I have a journal club where we each present and talk through a paper that |
1:20.9 | we have found interesting in the previous couple of months. |
1:24.0 | Now, I hope this will help people not only understand the results of the specific papers |
1:27.7 | we go through, which is part of the exercise, but also to give people an idea of how to |
1:32.0 | read and interpret a paper that you might read. In some ways, I think that's equally |
1:36.0 | if not more important as part of this exercise. |
1:38.8 | For my paper, we looked at a study on Metformin by Keys et al, which looked back at the 2014 |
1:44.5 | study by Bannister et al, that initially got everyone really interested in Metformin |
1:50.0 | as a possible Jiro protective molecule. Through looking at this paper, we discussed Metformin |
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