Literature DB >> 12954439

Basal ganglia systems in ritualistic social displays: reptiles and humans; function and illness.

Lewis R Baxter1.   

Abstract

Complex, situation-specific territorial maintenance routines are similar across living terrestrial vertebrates (=amniotes). Decades ago, Paul MacLean et al., at the Laboratory of Brain Evolution and Behavior of the National Institute of Mental Health, postulated that these are evolutionarily conserved behaviors whose expression is mediated by the similarly conserved amniote basal ganglia and related brain systems (BG systems). Therefore, they undertook studies in nonhuman primates and in small social lizards (the common green anole, Anolis carolinensis) to examine this idea. MacLean et al. also postulated that when BG systems misfunction in humans, behavioral abnormalities result, some of them under the rubric of psychiatric illnesses. Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) was singled out as one likely candidate. In the last dozen years, functional brain imaging studies of OCD patients have validated the contention that this is, in fact, a condition involving dysfunctioning BG systems. Inspired by the MacLean group's original investigations, my colleagues and I have now applied related functional imaging techniques in naturalistic experiments using Anolis to better understand BG systems' roles in the mediation of complex behavioral routines in healthy amniotes. Here, I will review this functional imaging work in primates (man, and a little in monkey) and in lizards. I believe the literature not only supports MacLean et al.'s contentions about BG systems and behavior in general, but also validates Paul MacLean's life-long contention that human behavioral medicine can profit from a broad comparative approach.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12954439     DOI: 10.1016/s0031-9384(03)00164-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  14 in total

Review 1.  The human parental brain: in vivo neuroimaging.

Authors:  James E Swain
Journal:  Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2010-10-29       Impact factor: 5.067

2.  Religion, evolution, and mental health: attachment theory and ETAS theory.

Authors:  Kevin J Flannelly; Kathleen Galek
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2009-03-17

Review 3.  Approaching the biology of human parental attachment: brain imaging, oxytocin and coordinated assessments of mothers and fathers.

Authors:  J E Swain; P Kim; J Spicer; S S Ho; C J Dayton; A Elmadih; K M Abel
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2014-03-15       Impact factor: 3.252

Review 4.  Brain basis of early parent-infant interactions: psychology, physiology, and in vivo functional neuroimaging studies.

Authors:  James E Swain; Jeffrey P Lorberbaum; Samet Kose; Lane Strathearn
Journal:  J Child Psychol Psychiatry       Date:  2007 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 8.982

5.  Beliefs about God, psychiatric symptoms, and evolutionary psychiatry.

Authors:  Kevin J Flannelly; Kathleen Galek; Christopher G Ellison; Harold G Koenig
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2010-06

6.  Belief in life-after-death, beliefs about the world, and psychiatric symptoms.

Authors:  Kevin J Flannelly; Christopher G Ellison; Kathleen Galek; Nava R Silton
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2012-09

7.  Baby stimuli and the parent brain: functional neuroimaging of the neural substrates of parent-infant attachment.

Authors:  James E Swain
Journal:  Psychiatry (Edgmont)       Date:  2008-08

Review 8.  A psychological and neuroanatomical model of obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Authors:  Edward D Huey; Roland Zahn; Frank Krueger; Jorge Moll; Dimitrios Kapogiannis; Eric M Wassermann; Jordan Grafman
Journal:  J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 2.198

Review 9.  Surgical neuroanatomy and programming in deep brain stimulation for obsessive compulsive disorder.

Authors:  Takashi Morishita; Sarah M Fayad; Wayne K Goodman; Kelly D Foote; Dennis Chen; David A Peace; Albert L Rhoton; Michael S Okun
Journal:  Neuromodulation       Date:  2013-12-17

10.  Affective neuronal selection: the nature of the primordial emotion systems.

Authors:  Judith A Toronchuk; George F R Ellis
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-01-09
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