Schizophrenia: A Neurodevelopmental Perspective |
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Authors: | Heather M. Conklin,& William G. Iacono |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota |
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Abstract: | Diverse lines of research suggest that schizophrenia is a genetically influenced neurodevelopmental disorder. Family, twin, and adoption studies suggest that most cases of schizophrenia involve a genetic diathesis that is necessary but not sufficient for development of the disorder. Histological, neuroimaging, and neuropsychological findings converge in providing evidence for medial-temporal and frontal lobe dysfunction that likely predates the onset of psychosis. Behavioral phenomenology and neurobiology suggest that dopamine plays a crucial moderating role between these structural abnormalities and functional impairment. Recently, investigators have used animal models and clinical syndromes to integrate these findings into neurodevelopmental models of schizophrenia that hold great potential for yielding etiological insight. |
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Keywords: | schizophrenia neurodevelopment etiology predisposition |
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