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Depressive disorders: toward a unified hypothesis.
- Source :
-
Science (New York, N.Y.) [Science] 1973 Oct 05; Vol. 182 (4107), pp. 20-9. - Publication Year :
- 1973
-
Abstract
- Our scientific understanding of psychiatric syndromes, including the phenomena of depression, has been hampered because of: (i) the use of metapsychological concepts that are difficult to test; (ii) methodological and linguistic barriers that prevent communication among psychoanalysts, behaviorists, experimental psychologists, and psychiatrists; and (iii) the reluctance of psychiatrists to accept animal models as possible approximations of certain aspects of human psychopathology. We have attempted to demonstrate that the animal models simulate some of the central features of clinical depression (for example, helplessness and object loss), thereby allowing one to rigorously investigate them from developmental, behavioral, and biochemical perspectives. The object loss model, as a concrete version of a metapsychological-psychoanalytic concept, has enabled primatologists to study the disruption of an attachment bond. The behavioral model accommodates this concept to a broader generalization: loss of reinforcement or loss of control over reinforcement. We have reviewed the evidence that these processes involve the diencephalic centers of reward or reinforcement, thereby permitting integration of the psychoanalytical and behavioral formulations with the biochemical hypotheses. Also, we have presented data strongly suggesting that the breaking of an attachment bond in the primate represents significant loss of reinforcement that induces helplessness and disrupts motivated behavior. Finally, we have argued that the depressive syndrome could be caused by interactions of genetic, chemical, developmental, and interpersonal factors, all of which impinge on the diencephalic centers of reinforcement.
- Subjects :
- Age Factors
Animals
Anxiety, Separation complications
Behavior, Animal drug effects
Biogenic Amines metabolism
Conditioning, Operant
Dogs
Female
Haplorhini
Humans
Hydroxydopamines pharmacology
Methyldopa pharmacology
Norepinephrine metabolism
Rats
Reinforcement, Psychology
Reserpine pharmacology
Serotonin metabolism
Stress, Psychological
Depression etiology
Depression genetics
Depression metabolism
Disease Models, Animal
Macaca
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0036-8075
- Volume :
- 182
- Issue :
- 4107
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Science (New York, N.Y.)
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 4199732
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.182.4107.20