Collecting Gone Amuck

When my uncle died he had multiple new items (for example, billfolds) still in unopened boxes stored in his house that was already short for space. They had no apparent purpose because he could never use these items due to his advanced age. Similarly, a rich neighbor also gathered package upon package of new shirts and simply kept them, never to be worn. 

These scenarios seem counterintuitive.  Why would someone do these things?  

A paper by Steven W. Anderson and his colleagues entitled “A neural basis for collecting behavior in humans” throws light on collecting gone amuck similar to that described above. Though the group studied patients with brain lesions, the findings can be extrapolated into a provisional hypothesis for collecting behavior in normal humans. This paper is extremely important because it is the first of its kind.  

Anderson, et al studied 87 subjects with brain lesions. Thirteen exhibited abnormal collecting behavior that was severe and associated with troublesome accumulative of useless objects. In the study, the collecting set of subjects exhibited this behavior only after the onset of their lesions, not before. A close relative, usually a spouse, was the source of this information. In order to qualify as a collecting subject, the individual had to accumulate objects of little value to excess in such a way that the collecting interfered with daily function. For example:

A 70-year-old, right-handed, retired bank clerk with 13 years of education underwent resection of an orbitofrontal meningioma. Her husband noted that all of her life she had been reluctant to throw away items with potential value, but that this characteristic was not so prominent as to cause any problems. However, following surgery, she began to collect large quantities of a wide array of items, to the extent that serious space problems arose in their home. She began ordering large quantities of unneeded items, particularly clothes, from mail-order catalogues, most of which her husband would intercept and return. 
Patient 8 from “A neural basis for collecting behavior in humans” by Steven W. Anderson, Hanna Damasio, and Antonio R. Damasio.

When the collecting set was compared to the non-collecting set, they did not differ in age or standardized neuropsychological tests designed to determine intellectual abilities. Additionally, the two groups were alike when examined for executive function skills and anterograde memory. The difference between the two sets of subjects was that the collecting group all had damage to a specific part of the frontal lobe called the mesial frontal region. The non-collecting group did not. The mesial frontal area is located in the executive frontal lobe of the brain medially.

Read more at: http://www.hcplive.com/physicians-money-digest/columns/my-money-md/05-2009/Collecting-Gone-Amuck#sthash.fGy395bB.dpuf

The Art Market in a Muck

Nov 06, 2014    |    My Money MD    |   Shirley Mueller, MD

The back of the Chinese plate I purchased and sent back.

The back of the Chinese plate I purchased and sent back.

If buying a fake piece of art can happen to Steve Martin, the actor and clearly a high-profile individual, why can’t it happen to you and me? 

According to many experts, 50% of the art on the market is fake. This gives us a moment for pause. One issue is whether high-net-worth individuals ($30 million and above) are really improving their overall asset positon by including art as a small percentage of their investment portfolios. Another is whether it is safe for the rest of us to be buying art at all. Or, yet another consideration, should we just not care and purchase what we can afford and like?

Hope Springs Eternal
Recently I purchased a blue and white Chinese plate said to be made around the year 1600. When I acquired it from a dealer located in a major capital city abroad I was already a bit suspicious. To me the blue coloration was off and the design on the large plate was less than traditional. Still, I needed it for an exhibit I was planning and wanted the plate to be as it was described—made around and about 1600. So, I talked with the dealer to discuss my concerns. I was told the color was not true in the photography and literally, “Not to worry.” Being more optimistic than prudent, in part since I had dealt with this dealer before and trusted him and his partner, I chose to buy the plate for the projected exhibit.

Read more at: http://www.hcplive.com/physicians-money-digest/columns/my-money-md/11-2014/The-Art-Market-in-a-Muck#sthash.Y6nuePQt.dpuf