Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent and actionable science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance. And now, my conversation with Dr. Carl Dyseroth.
well thanks for being here thanks for having me so for people that might not be so familiar with the fields of neuroscience etc what is the difference between neurology and psychiatry psychiatry focuses on disorders where we can't see something that's physically wrong, where we don't have a measurable, where there's no blood test that makes the diagnosis, there's no brain scan that tells us this is schizophrenia, this is depression for an individual patient.
and so psychiatry is is much more mysterious and The only tools we have are words. Neurologists are fantastic physicians. They see the stroke on brain scans. They see the seizure and the pre-seizure activity with an EEG. and they can measure and treat based on those measurables. In psychiatry, we have a harder job. We use words. We have rating scales for symptoms. We can measure depression and autism with rating scales, but those are words still.
And ultimately that's what psychiatry is built around. It's an odd situation because we've got the most complex, beautiful, mysterious, incredibly engineered object in the universe, and yet all we have are words to find our way in. So do you find that if a patient is,
very verbal or hyperverbal, that you have an easier time diagnosing them, as opposed to somebody who's more quiet and reserved, or I can imagine the opposite might be true as well. Well, because we only have words, you put your finger on a key point. If they don't speak that much in principle, it's harder.
The lack of speech can be a symptom. We can see that in depression. We can see that in the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. We can see that in autism. Sometimes by itself, that is a symptom of reduced speech. But ultimately, you do need something. You need some words to help guide you. And that, in fact, there's challenges that I can tell you about where patients with depression who are so depressed they can't speak.
That makes it a bit of a challenge to distinguish depression from some of the other reasons they might not be speaking. And this is sort of the art and the science of psychiatry. Do you think we will ever have a blood test for depression or schizophrenia or autism? And would that be a good or a bad thing? I think ultimately there will be quantitative tests. Already efforts are being made to look at certain rhythms in the brain using external EEGs to look at brain waves effectively.
But ultimately what's going on in the brain in psychiatric disease is physical and it's due to the circuits and the connections and the projections in the brain that are not working as they would in a typical situation. I do think we'll have those measurables at some point.
Could it be abused or misused? Certainly, but that's, I think, true for all of medicine. I want to know, and I'm sure there are several, but what do you see as the biggest challenge facing psychiatry and the treatment of mental illness today? I think we're making progress on what the biggest challenge is, which I think there's still such a strong stigma for psychiatric disease that patients often don't come to us. They feel that they should be able to handle this on their own.
And that can slow treatment. It can lead to, you know, worsening symptoms. We know, for example, patients who have untreated anxiety issues, if you go... for a year or more with a serious untreated anxiety issue, that can convert to depression. You can add another problem on top of the anxiety. And so it would be Why do people not come for treatment? They feel like this is something they should be able to master on their own, which can be true, but usually some help is a good thing.
That raises a question related to something I heard you say many years ago at a lecture, which was that this was a scientific lecture, and you said, you know, we don't know how other people feel. Most of the time, we don't even really know how we feel. Maybe you could elaborate on that a little bit, and the dearth of ways that we We have to talk about feelings. I mean, there's so many words. I don't know how many, but I'm guessing there are more than a dozen words to describe.
the state that I call sadness. But as far as I understand, we don't have any way of comparing that in a real objective sense. So how, as a psychiatrist, when your job is to use words to diagnose words of the patient to diagnose, do you maneuver around that? And what is this landscape that we call feelings or emotions? This is really interesting. People, here we have, there's a tension between the words that we've built up in the clinic that mean something to the physicians.
And then there's the colloquial use of words that may not be the same. And so that's the first level we have to sort out when someone says, you know, I'm depressed. What exactly do they mean by that? And that may be different from what we're talking about in terms of depression. So part of psychiatry is to get beyond that word and to get into how they're actually feeling, get rid of the jargon and get to real world examples of how they're feeling.
how do you what how much do you look forward into the future how much uh hope do you have how much planning are you doing for the future so these here now you're getting into actual things you can talk about that are unambiguous. If someone says, yeah, I can't even think about tomorrow, I don't see how I'm going to get to tomorrow. That's a nice, precise thing. It's sad, it's tragic, but it's also that means something. And we know what that means. That's the hopelessness symptom of depression.
And that is what I try to do when I do a psychiatric interview. I try to get past the jargon and get to what's actually happening in the patient's life and in their mind. But as you say, ultimately, this shows up across. I address this issue every day in my life, whether it's in the lab, whatever we're looking at. animals, whether fish or mice or rats, and studying their behavior, or when I'm in a conversation with just a friend or a colleague.
Or when I'm talking to a patient, I never really know what's going on inside the mind of the other person. I got some feedback. I got words. I get behaviors, I get actions, but I never really know. Are there any very good treatments for psychiatric disease? Meaning, are there currently any pills, potions, forms of communication that reliably work every time? or work in most patients. And could you give a couple examples of great successes of psychiatry if they exist? Yes.
In psychiatry, despite the depths of the mystery we struggle with, many of our treatments are actually, we may be doing better than some other specialties in terms of actually causing therapeutic benefit for patients. We do help patients. You know, patients who suffer from, by the way, both medications and talk therapy have been shown to be extremely effective in many cases. For example, people with panic disorder.
cognitive behavioral therapy, just working with words, helping people identify the early signs of when they're starting to move toward a panic attack. What are the cognitions that are happening? You can train people to derail that and you can very potently treat panic disorder that way. There are many psychiatric medications that are very effective for the conditions that they're treating.
Antipsychotic medications, they have side effects, but boy, do they work. They really can clear up auditory hallucinations, the paranoia. And then, you know, this is a frustrating and yet heartening aspect of psychiatry. There are treatments like electroconvulsive therapy, which is extremely effective for depression. Nothing else works for them.
where they can't tolerate medications and you can administer under a very safe controlled condition where the patient's body is not moving they're put into a very safe situation where the body doesn't move or sees it's just an internal process that's triggered in the brain. This is an extraordinarily effective treatment for treatment resistant depression. At the same time, I find it as heartening as it is to see patients respond to this who have severe depression.
I'm also frustrated by it. Why can't we do something more precise than this for these very severe cases? In all these cases, though, in psychiatry, the frustrating thing is that we don't have the level of understanding that a cardiologist has and thinking about the heart you know the heart is we now know it's a pump it's pumping blood and so you can look at everything about it's working or not working in terms of that frame it's clearly a pump we don't really have that level of
What is the circuit really there for in psychiatry? I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, David. David makes a protein bar unlike any other. It has 28 grams of protein, only 150 calories, and 0 grams of sugar. That's right, 28 grams of protein and 75% of its calories come from protein. This is 50% higher than the next closest protein bar. David protein bars also taste amazing. Even the texture is amazing.
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what the activity patterns are, how to modify those. Maybe you could just tell us what you think. What is the bento box of the perfect? Sure. Yeah. I think the first thing we need is understanding what is the element of the brain that's analogous to the pumping heart. When we think about the symptoms of depression, that's maybe, you know, we think about motivation and dopamine neurons.
And so then that turns our attention as neuroscientists. We think, okay, let's think about the parts of the brain that are involved in dealing with merging complex data streams that are very high in bitrate that need to be fused together into a unitary concept.
and that starts to guide us and maybe we can and we know other animals are social in their own way and we can study those animals and so that there's that's how I think about it there's hope for the future thinking about the symptoms as an engineer might and trying to identify the circuits that are likely working to make this.
typical behavior happen and that will help us understand how it becomes atypical. We need to know the circuits. We need to know the cells in the various brain regions and portions of the body and how they connect to one another. and what the patterns of activity are under a normal, quote-unquote, healthy interaction. If we understand that, then it seems that the next step, which of course can be carried out in parallel, right? That work can be done alongside work where
various elements within those circuits are tweaked just right. Like the tuning of a piano in the subtle way, or maybe even like the replacement of a whole set of keys if the piano is lacking keys, so to speak. In 2015, there was what I thought was a very nice article published in the New Yorker describing your work and the current state of your work in the laboratory and the clinic and an interaction with a patient. This was, as I recall, a woman who was severely depressed.
and you reported in that article some of the discussion with this patient, and then in real time... increase the activation of the so-called vagus nerve, this 10th cranial nerve that extends out of the skull and innervates many of the viscera and body. What is the potential for channel rhodopsins or related types of algae engineering to be used to manipulate the vagus
Because I believe in that instance, it wasn't channel opposite stimulation. It was electrical stimulation, right? Or to manipulate, for instance, a very small localized region of the brain. Let me frame it a little bit differently in light of what we were talking about a couple minutes ago. My understanding is that if somebody has severe depression and they take any number of the available
pharmaceutical agents that are out there, SSRI, serotonin agents, increased dopamine, increased whatever, that sometimes they experience relief, but there are often serious side effects. Sometimes they don't experience relief, but as I understand it, channel options and their related technology in principle. would allow you to turn on or off the specific regions of the brain that lead to the depressive symptoms, or maybe you turn up a happiness circuit or a positive anticipation circuit.
Where are we at now in terms of bringing this technology to the nervous system? And let's start with the body and then move into the skull. So starting with the body is a good example because it highlights the opportunity and how far we have to go.
So let's take this example of vagus nerve stimulation. So the vagus nerve, it's the 10th cranial nerve. It comes from the brain, it goes down, it innervates the heart, innervates the gut. And by innervate, I mean it sends little connections down to help. guide what happens in these organs in the abdomen and chest. It also collects information back, and there's information coming back from all those organs that also go through this vagus nerve, the 10th cranial nerve, back to the brain.
And so this is somewhat of a superhighway to the brain then was the idea. And maybe the idea is maybe we could put a little cuff, a little electrical... device around the vagus nerve itself so a way of getting into the brain without putting something physical into the brain. And why the Vegas? I mean, it's there and it's accessible. That's the reason. That's the reason? That's the reason, yes. Really? Yeah.
You're not kidding. I'm not kidding. So stimulating the vagus to treat depression simply because it's accessible. It started actually as an epilepsy.
treatment and it can help with epilepsy but the vagus nerve lands on a particular spot on the brain called the solitary tract nucleus which is just one synapse away from the serotonin and dopamine and the norepinephrine so there's a link to chemical systems in the brain that make it a rational choice yes it's not it's not irrational but i can tell you that even if that
We're not sure the same thing would have been tried. You guys would have done it. Because it's accessible. How do you think it's working when it does work? Is it triggering the activation of neurons that release more serotonin or dopamine? It could be, but I would say we don't have evidence for that, and so I just don't know. But what is clear is that it's dose limited in how high and strongly we can stimulate. And why? It's because it's an electrode and it's stimulating everything nearby.
And when you turn on the vagus nerve stimulator, the patient's voice becomes strangulated and hoarse. They can have trouble swallowing. They can have trouble speaking for sure. Even some trouble breathing. because everything in the neck, every electrically responsive cell and projection in the neck is being affected by this electrode and so you can go up just so far with the intensity and then you have to stop.
So, you know, to your initial question, could a more precise stimulation method like optogenetics help in this setting? In principle, it could because if you would target the light sensitivity to just the right kind of cell, Let's say cell X that goes from point A to point B that you know causes symptom relief of a particular kind. Then you're in business. You can have that be the only cell that's light sensitive. You're not going to affect any of the other cells, the larynx and the pharynx.
projections passing through so that's the hope that's the opportunity to problem is that we don't yet have that level of specific knowledge. We don't know Okay, it's the cell starting point A going to point B that relieves this particular system. We want to fix this key on the piano. I'm imagining a little tiny blue light emitting thing object that's... A little bigger than a clump of cells or maybe about the size of a clump of cells. So we're talking about a little tiny stamp.
Each edge half a millimeter in size. I can imagine that being put under my skin. And then I would hit an app on my phone and I'd say, Dr. Diceroth, I'm not feeling great today. Can I increase the stimulation? And you say, go for it.
and then I ramp it up. Is that how it would go? I mean, that's effectively what we already do with the vagus nerve stimulation, the doctor in this case, and I have this in some of my patients in the clinic. I do vagus nerve stimulation. I talk to them. I say, I go through the symptoms. I use the psychiatric interview to elicit. that their internal states And then I have a radio frequency controller that I can dial in.
Right there in real time. You're holding the remote control essentially to their brain, although it's remote, remote control. Through a couple steps, but yeah. And I can turn up the frequency, I can turn up the intensity with the radio frequency and control, and then it's reprogrammed. or redosed, and then the patient can then leave at this altered dose. In most patients, I don't expect an immediate mood change. what I do is I increase the dose until
next level up while asking the patient for side effects. Can you still breathe okay? Can you still swallow okay? And I can hear their voice as well and I can get a sense. And you're looking at their face. And I'm looking at their face. And so I can get a sense as their Am I still in a safe side effect regime? And then I stop at a particular point that looks safe, and then the patient goes home. Comes back a month later, and I get the report on how things were over that month.
That's very exciting. What are your thoughts about brain-machine interface as something that's been happening for a long time now? Devices? Little probes are going to stimulate different patterns of activity in ensembles of neurons. first of all it's an amazing scientific discovery approach. As you mentioned, we and others here at Stanford are using electrodes, collecting information from tens of thousands of neurons, even separate from the Neuralink work.
to point out, many people have been doing this in humans as well as in non-human primates. And this is pretty powerful. It's important. This will let us understand what's going on in the brain in psychiatric disease and neurological disease and give us ideas for treatment. I see that as something that... will be part of psychiatry in the long run already with deep brain stimulation approaches. We can help people with psychiatric disorders.
And that's putting just a single electrode, not even a complex closed loop system where you're both playing in and getting information back. Even just a single stimulation electrode in the brain can help people with. OCD for example, quite powerfully. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, Eight Sleep.
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And there are a number of reasons for that, of course. But what is true ADHD and what... does it look like what can be done for it and what if any role for channel options or these downstream technologies that you're developing, what do they offer for people that suffer from ADHD or have a family member that suffers from ADHD? This is a pretty interesting branch of psychiatry. There's no question that people have been helped by the treatments. There's active debate over...
what fraction of people who have these symptoms can or should be treated. This is typically Adderall or stimulants of some kind. Yeah, for example, stimulants, that's right. So ADHD, as its name suggests, it has symptoms can have either a hyperactive state or an inattentive state.
and those can be completely separate from each other you could have a patient who effectively is not hyperactive at all but can't remain focused on the what's going on around them so their body can be still but their mind is darting around that's right or they can be very hyperactive with their body probably rarely is somebody hyperactive with their body but their mind is still I notice I have
to think complex abstract thoughts I notice I have to be very still so my body has to be almost completely unmoving for me to think very abstractly And deeply. Other people are different. Some people, when they're running, they get their best thoughts. I can't even imagine that. My brain does not work that way at all. I have to be totally motionless, which is kind of interesting. How do you go about that? I sit much like this. I try to have time in each day where I'm literally sitting.
almost in this position, but without distraction and thinking. And so it's kind of a, it's almost meditative in some ways, except it's not. True meditation, but I am thinking while not moving. You're trying to structure your thoughts in that time. Interesting. But everybody, as you say, is very different. And so with ADHD, you have the key thing is we want to make sure that this is present across different domains of life.
school and home, to show that it really is a pervasive pattern and not something specific to the teacher or the home situation or something. And then you can help patients. It's interesting that ADHD is one of those disorders where people are trying to work on quantitative EEG-based diagnoses, and so there's some progress toward making up a diagnosis with
looking at particular externally detectable brainwave rhythms. So skullcap with some electrodes that don't penetrate the skull. That's right. And this can be done in an hour or two-hour session. That's right. It has to be done in... clinic right yeah in the clinic right you have to have the right recording apparatus and so on but but uh that's in principle uh as you increasing confidence comes in exactly which measurements One could even imagine moving toward home tests, but we're not there yet.
Amazing. I think one of the reasons I get asked about it so much is a lot of people wonder if they have ADHD. Do you think that some of the lifestyle factors that inhabit us all these days could induce a subclinical or a clinical-like ADHD meaning if
I look at people's phone use, including my own, and I don't think of it like addiction. It looks to me and feels to me more like OCD. And I'll come clean here by saying when I was younger, when I was a kid, I had a grunting tick. I used to hide it. I actually used to hide in the closet because my dad would make me stop.
and I used to I couldn't feel any relief of my mind until I would do this and actually now if I get very tired if I've been pushing long hours it'll come back I was not treated for it but I will confess that i've had the experience of i always liked sports where i involve a lot of impact fortunately not football because i went to high school where the football team was terrible maybe that would have avoided more impact but things like skateboarding boxing
They bring relief. I feel clarity after a head hit, which I avoid. But I used to say that's the only time I feel truly clear. And then eventually it dissipated. By about age 16, 17, it just disappeared. So I have great empathy for those that feel like there's something contained in them that won't allow them to focus on what they want to focus on. And these days with the phone and all these emails, et cetera, I wonder and I empathize a bit when I hear people saying like,
I think I might have ADHD or ADD. Do you think it's possible that our behaviors and our interaction with the sensory world, which is really what phones and email really are, could induce ADD or reactivate it? This is a great question. I think about it a lot. You mentioned this tick-like behavior in yourself. It's very common that people who have ticks have this building up.
of something that can only be relieved by executing the tick, which can be a motor movement or vocalization or even a thought. And people do, I think these days, do have this, if they haven't checked their phone in a while, they do have a build up and build up and build up until they can check it and relieve it. And there's some similarities, you know, there is a little reward that comes with the checking.
But the key question in all of psychiatry, what we do is we don't diagnose something unless It's disrupting what we call social or occupational functioning. Like you could have any number of symptoms, but literally every psychiatric diagnosis requires that it has to be disrupting someone's social or occupational functioning and these days you know checking your phone is pretty adaptive that pretty much helps your social and occupational functioning and so we can't
We can't make it a psychiatric diagnosis, at least in the world of today. I'd love your thoughts on psychedelic medicine, putting them into patients. and seeing tremendous positive effects, but also... tremendous examples of induced psychiatric illness. In other words, many people lost their minds as a consequence of overuse of psychedelics. I'll probably lose a few people out there. but I do want to talk about
What is the state of these compounds? And I realize it's a huge category of compounds, but LSD and psilocybin, as I understand, trigger activation of particular serotonin receptor mechanisms. may or may not lead to more widespread activation of the brain that one wouldn't see otherwise. But when you look at the clinical and experimental literature,
What is your sort of top contour sense of how effective these tools are going to be for treating depression? Well, you're right to highlight both opportunity and the peril that is there. And of course we want to help patients and of course we want to explore anything that might not be helpful, but we want to do it in a safe and rigorous way. But I do think we should explore these avenues. These are agents that alter reality and alter the experience of reality, I should say.
in relatively precise ways. They do have problems. They can be addictive. They can cause lasting change that is not desirable. That said, even as these medications exist now, As you know, there's an impulse to use them in very small doses and to use them as adjunctive treatments for therapy of various kinds. And I'm also supportive of that if done carefully and rigorously.
Of course, there's risk, but there is risk with many other kinds of treatment, and I'm not sure that the risks for these medications vastly outweigh the risks that we normally tolerate in other branches of medicine. Why would they work? I mean, they... You know, Let's say that indeed their main effect is to create more connectivity, at least in the moment.
between brain errors. So psychedelics seem to be a trajectory not too far off from the dream state where space and time are essentially not as rigid. And there is this element of synesthesia, blending of the senses, you know, feeling colors and hearing light and things of that sort. You hear these reports anyway. Why would having that dreamlike experience somehow relieve depression long term. Do we have any idea why that might be?
We have some ideas and no deep understanding. One way I think about the psychedelics is they... increase our willingness to increase the willingness of our brain to accept unlikely ways of constructing the world unlikely hypotheses as it were as to what's going on the brain in particular cortex I think is a
hypothesis generation and testing machine. It's coming up with models about everything. It's got a lot of bits of data coming in and it's making models and updating the models and changing them, theories, hypotheses for what's going on. And some of those never reach our conscious mind. And this is something I talk about in projections in the book quite a bit is
Many of these are filtered out before they get to our conscious mind, and that's good. We think how distracted we'd be if we were constantly having to evaluate all these hypotheses about what kinds of shapes or objects or processes were out there.
and so a lot of this is handled before it gets to consciousness what the psychedelics seem to do is they change the threshold for us to become aware of these incomplete hypotheses or wrong hypotheses or concepts that might be noise but are just wrong and so are never allowed to get into our conscious mind. Now, that's pretty interesting, and it goes wrong in psychiatric disorders. I think in schizophrenia, sometimes the paranoid delusions that people have are examples of.
these poor models that escape into the conscious mind and become accepted as reality and they never should have gotten out there. Now how could something like this in the right way help with something like depression?
Patients with depression often are stuck. They can't look into the future world of possibilities as effectively there's everything seems uh hopeless and what does that really mean they they discount the value of their own action they discount the value of the world at giving rise to a future that matters everything seems to run out like a river just running out into a desert and drying up and
What these agents may do that increase the flow through circuitry, if you will, the percolation of activity through circuitry may end up doing for depression is increasing the escape of some tendrils of... process of forward progression through the world. That's a concept. That's how I think about it. There are ways we can make that rigorous. We can indeed identify in the brain by recording. We can see cells that represent steps along a path and look into the future.
And we can rigorously define these cells and we can see if these are altered on psychedelics. And so that's one of the reasons that we're working with these agents in the laboratory to say, is this really the case? Are these opening up? new paths or representations of paths into the future.
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MDMA, ecstasy, is a unique compound in that it leads to big increases in brain levels of dopamine and serotonin simultaneously. And I realized that the neuromodulators like dopamine and serotonin often work in concert, not alone, the way they're commonly described in the... the more general popular discussions. However, it is a unique compound, and it's different than the serotonergic compounds like LSD and psilocybin.
And there are now data still emerging that it might be and in some cases can be useful for the treatment of trauma, PTSD, and similar things. Why would that work? And a larger question, perhaps the more important question is, So psychedelics, MDMA, LSD, all those compounds, in my mind, there are two components. There's the experience you have while you're on them, and then there's the effect they have after.
People are generating variations of these compounds that are non-hallucinatory variations, but how crucial do you think it is to have, let's stay with MDMA, the experience of Huge levels of dopamine, huge levels of serotonin, atypical levels of dopamine and serotonin released, having this highly abnormal experience in order to be normal again.
I think the brain learns from those experiences. That's the way I see it. And so, for example, people who have taken MDMA They will, as you say, they'll be the acute phase of being on the drug and experiencing this extreme connectedness with other people, for example. And then the drug wears off, but the brain learned from that experience. And so what people will report is, yeah, I'm not in that state, but I saw what was possible. I saw, yeah, you can...
There don't need to be barriers, or at least not as many barriers as I thought. I can connect with more people in a way that is helpful. And so I think it's the learning. that happens in that state that actually matters. And as you described that, that sounds a lot like what I understand to be the hallmark feature of really good psychoanalysis, that the relationship between patient and therapist hopefully evolves to the point where
these kinds of tests can be run within the context of that relationship and then exported to other relationships. Exactly right. And that probably, I'm assuming, is still the goal of really good psychiatry also. That's a part of intimacy, really. It should be when we have I think all good psychiatrists try to achieve that level of connection and learning. Try to help patients create a new a new model that is stable, that is learned, and that can help instruct future behavior.
One of the things that I took from reading your book, in addition to learning so much science and the future of psychiatry and brain science, was... you know, amidst these very tragic cases and sadness and a lot of the weight that that puts on the clinician, on you also, that there's a... central chord of optimism, that where we're headed is not just possible, but very likely and better. And, you know...
Are you an optimist? I am. And this is, by the way, this was a really interesting experience in writing projections because I had a dual goal. I wanted it to be for everybody, literally everybody in the world who wants to read it. And yet at the same time I wanted to stay absolutely rigorously close to the science, what was actually known when I was speaking about science, when I was speaking about the neurobiology of the brain or psychiatry, I wanted to.
to not have any of my scientific colleagues think, oh, he's going too far, he's saying too much. And so I had these two goals, which I kept in my mind the entire time, and a lot of this trying to find exactly the right word we talked about was, on this path of staying excruciatingly rigorous in the science, and yet letting people see the hope, where things were, have everybody see that we've come a long way, we have a long way to go.
But the trajectory and the path is beautiful. And so that was the goal, I think. Of course, that sounds almost impossible to jointly satisfy those two. those two goals, but I kept that in my mind the whole way through. And yes, I am optimistic, and I hope that came through in the book. But it certainly did, and at least from this colleague.
you did achieve both. And it's a wonderful, it's a masterful book, really, and one that as a scientist and somebody who is a... fellow grain explorer hits all the marks of rigor and is incredibly interesting and there's a ton of storytelling definitely check out the book there are other people in our community that of course are going to be reaching out on your behalf, but it's incredible that you juggle this enormous number of things. perhaps even more.
Important, however, is that it's all in service to this larger thing of relieving suffering. So thank you so much for your time today. for the book. and the work that went into the book, I can't even imagine, for the laboratory work and the development of channel ops and clarity and all the related technologies and for the clinical work you're doing and for sharing with us.
Well, thank you for all you're doing and reaching out. I'm very impressed by it. It's important and it's so valuable. And thank you for taking the time and for all your gracious words about the book. Thank you.