Literature DB >> 18091193

Beliefs, mental health, and evolutionary threat assessment systems in the brain.

Kevin J Flannelly1, Harold G Koenig, Kathleen Galek, Christopher G Ellison.   

Abstract

This article reviews aspects of the literature on neuroscience, psychiatry, and cognitive and evolutionary psychology to illustrate how primitive brain mechanisms that evolved to assess environmental threats underlie psychiatric disorders, and how beliefs can affect psychiatric symptoms through these brain systems. Psychiatric theories are discussed that (a) link psychiatric disorders to threat assessment and (b) explain how the normal functioning of threat assessment systems can become pathological. Three brain structures that are consistently implicated in psychiatric symptomology also are involved in threat assessment and self-defense: the prefrontal cortex, the basal ganglia, and parts of the so-called limbic system. We propose that as these structures evolved over time they formed what we refer to as evolutionary threat assessment systems, which detect and assess potential threats of harm. Drawing on various psychological and psychiatric theories we propose how beliefs about the world can moderate psychiatric symptoms through their influence on evolutionary threat assessment systems.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 18091193     DOI: 10.1097/NMD.0b013e31815c19b1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nerv Ment Dis        ISSN: 0022-3018            Impact factor:   2.254


  10 in total

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

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

2.  The Place of Faith for Consultant Obstetricians Following Stillbirth: A Qualitative Exploratory Study.

Authors:  Daniel Nuzum; Sarah Meaney; Keelin O'Donoghue
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2016-10

3.  Association of posterior EEG alpha with prioritization of religion or spirituality: A replication and extension at 20-year follow-up.

Authors:  Craig E Tenke; Jürgen Kayser; Connie Svob; Lisa Miller; Jorge E Alvarenga; Karen Abraham; Virginia Warner; Priya Wickramaratne; Myrna M Weissman; Gerard E Bruder
Journal:  Biol Psychol       Date:  2017-01-22       Impact factor: 3.251

4.  Who Does Believe in life After Death? Brazilian Data from Clinical and Non-clinical Samples.

Authors:  Cristiane Schumann Silva Curcio; Alexander Moreira-Almeida
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2019-08

5.  The mental health sequelae of traumatic head injury in South Vietnamese ex-political detainees who survived torture.

Authors:  Richard F Mollica; Miriam C Chernoff; S Megan Berthold; James Lavelle; In Kyoon Lyoo; Perry Renshaw
Journal:  Compr Psychiatry       Date:  2014-04-26       Impact factor: 3.735

6.  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

7.  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

8.  Beliefs about God and mental health among American adults.

Authors:  Nava R Silton; Kevin J Flannelly; Kathleen Galek; Christopher G Ellison
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2014-10

9.  When too much is not enough: obsessive-compulsive disorder as a pathology of stopping, rather than starting.

Authors:  Andrea L Hinds; Erik Z Woody; Michael Van Ameringen; Louis A Schmidt; Henry Szechtman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-01-26       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  The biochemistry of belief.

Authors:  T S Sathyanarayana Rao; M R Asha; K S Jagannatha Rao; P Vasudevaraju
Journal:  Indian J Psychiatry       Date:  2009 Oct-Dec       Impact factor: 1.759

  10 in total

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