Literature DB >> 33074057

From Description to Explanation: Integrating Across Multiple Levels of Analysis to Inform Neuroscientific Accounts of Dimensional Personality Pathology.

Timothy A Allen1, Alison M Schreiber2, Nathan T Hall2, Michael N Hallquist2.   

Abstract

Dimensional approaches to psychiatric nosology are rapidly transforming the way researchers and clinicians conceptualize personality pathology, leading to a growing interest in describing how individuals differ from one another. Yet, in order to successfully prevent and treat personality pathology, it is also necessary to explain the sources of these individual differences. The emerging field of personality neuroscience is well-positioned to guide the transition from description to explanation within personality pathology research. However, establishing comprehensive, mechanistic accounts of personality pathology will require personality neuroscientists to move beyond atheoretical studies that link trait differences to neural correlates without considering the algorithmic processes that are carried out by those correlates. We highlight some of the dangers we see in overpopulating personality neuroscience with brain-trait associational studies and offer a series of recommendations for personality neuroscientists seeking to build explanatory theories of personality pathology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  causation; explanation; neuroscience; personality pathology; trait

Year:  2020        PMID: 33074057      PMCID: PMC7583665          DOI: 10.1521/pedi.2020.34.5.650

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Disord        ISSN: 0885-579X


  110 in total

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9.  The neurobiology of dispositional negativity and attentional biases to threat: Implications for understanding anxiety disorders in adults and youth.

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Journal:  J Exp Psychopathol       Date:  2016

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Authors:  Andrew J Cooper; Eilish Duke; Alan D Pickering; Luke D Smillie
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2014-04-28       Impact factor: 3.169

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2.  Explanatory personality science in the neuroimaging era: The map is not the territory.

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