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Neuropsychiatric disorders, covering both psychotic and depressive disorders, but also autism and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), are characterized by abnormal behavior and brain structure. Accumulating evidence suggests that altered neurochemistry plays a role in these disorders and may have a causal relationship with the observed behavioral and structural abnormalities. To improve the understanding of neurochemical anomalies
...The following Research Topic is intended to cover new scientific ground within psychopathology elucidating the potential liaison between the subjective, bodily Self-experience (i.e., the lived body seen as an interface with the external social world) and electrophysiological evidence (i.e., the perception of the body from within) by adopting an interdisciplinary approach involving interaction among Neurophysiology, Psychiatry, and Phenomenology.
...Dissociative symptoms are notorious for their enigmatic, disparate nature encompassing excessive daydreaming, memory problems, absentmindedness, and impairments and discontinuities in perceptions of the self, identity, and the environment. The famous 19th-century British neurologist Hughlings Jackson was the first to view dissociation as the uncoupling of normal consciousness, resulting in what he termed 'the dreamy state'. Recent studies have
...Neuropsychiatric diseases are widely ascribed to neuronal malfunction or loss. Although it is well known that the brain is composed of many different cell types, this neuron-centric view has dominated neuropathology for a long time, and almost all pharmacological therapies were designed to restore neuronal functions or ensure their survival. Actually the brain, like all organs, is a multicellular structure, and its operation cannot be perceived
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