The Unbalanced Brain: From Normal Behavior to Schizophrenia

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dc.contributor.author Grossberg, Stephen en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2011-11-14T19:00:13Z
dc.date.available 2011-11-14T19:00:13Z
dc.date.issued 1999-10 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2144/2235
dc.description.abstract An outstanding problem in psychiatry concerns how to link discoveries about the pharmacological, neurophysiological, and neuroanatomical substrates of mental disorders to the abnormal behaviors that they control. A related problem concerns how to understand abnormal behaviors on a continuum with normal behaviors. During the past few decades, neural models have been developed of how normal cognitive and emotional processes learn from the environment, focus attention and act upon motivationally important events, and cope with unexpected events. When arousal or volitional signals in these models are suitably altered, they give rise to symptoms that strikingly resemble negative and positive symptoms of schizophrenia, including flat affect, impoverishment of will, attentional problems, loss of a theory of mind, thought derailment, hallucinations, and delusions. The present article models how emotional centers of the brain, such as the amygdala, interact with sensory and prefrontal cortices (notably ventral, or orbital, prefrontal cortex) to generate affective states, attend to motivationally salient sensory events, and elicit motivated behaviors. Closing this feedback loop between cognitive and emotional centers is predicted to generate a cognitive-emotional resonance that can support conscious awareness. When such emotional centers become depressed, negative symptoms of schizophrenia emerge in the model. Such emotional centers are modeled as opponent affective processes, such as fear and relief, whose response amplitude and sensitivity are calibrated by an arousal level and chemical transmitters that slowly inactivate, or habituate, in an activity-dependent way. These opponent processes exhibit an Inverted-U whereby behavior become depressed if the arousal level is chosen too large or too small. The negative symptoms are due to the way in which the depressed opponent process interacts with other circuits throughout the brain. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409); National Science Foundation (IRI-97-20333) en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Boston University Center for Adaptive Systems and Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries BU CAS/CNS Technical Reports;CAS/CNS-TR-1999-018 en_US
dc.rights Copyright 1999 Boston University. Permission to copy without fee all or part of this material is granted provided that: 1. The copies are not made or distributed for direct commercial advantage; 2. the report title, author, document number, and release date appear, and notice is given that copying is by permission of BOSTON UNIVERSITY TRUSTEES. To copy otherwise, or to republish, requires a fee and / or special permission. en_US
dc.subject Schizophrenia en_US
dc.subject Arousal en_US
dc.subject Prefontal cortex en_US
dc.subject Amygdala en_US
dc.subject Opponent process en_US
dc.subject Neural networks en_US
dc.title The Unbalanced Brain: From Normal Behavior to Schizophrenia en_US
dc.type Technical Report en_US
dc.rights.holder Boston University Trustees en_US

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