STRATEGIES FOR STUDYING BRAIN DISORDERS

Vol.9 Beyond Neuropsychiatric Diagnostics:Symptoms not Disorders

Vol.9 Beyond Neuropsychiatric Diagnostics:Symptoms not Disorders

Editors:Tomás Palomo, Richard J. Beninger, Trevor Archer, Richard M. Kostrzewa

June 2009

Publisher: Editorial CYM, General Oráa, 47, 28006 MADRID

ISBN: 978-84-934250-4-3

Pages: 738

Congresos

Beyond Neuropsychiatric Diagnostics: Symptoms not Disorders

Mazagón (Huelva)

October 17 - 21 2007

The content of this congress, together with other contributions on this topic, will be collected in vol. 9 of the series "Strategies for studying Brain Disorders". To be Published mid way through 2008.

PROGRAMME

  • Tomas Palomo, Spain
    Opening Remark

S1. COMMON NEUROCIRCUITS UNDERLYING COMMON SYMPTOMS IN PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS

  • Anthony Grace, USA
    Hippocampal dysfunction and disruption of dopamine system regulation in an animal model of schizophrenia
  • David Lewis, USA
    Disruption of prefrontal circuits
  • Françesc Artigas, Spain
    Antipsychotic actions in cortico-subcortical circuits
  • Jose Borrell, Spain
    Maternal infection and brain development: Implications for schizophrenia
  • Bita Moghaddam, USA
    Cognitive function mediated by prefrontal cortical neurotransmitters
  • Michael Sutton, USA
    Dendritic mechanisms of synaptic plasticity

S2. PSYCHOSES

  • Mark Geyer, USA
    Translational animal models of psychiatric symptoms
  • Celso Arango, Spain
    Is type of cognitive impairment specific to different psychosis diagnoses?
  • Anissa Abi-Dargham, USA
    Relationships between dopamine function and clinical dimensions
  • Douglas Blackwood, UK
    Chromosomal abnormalities and psychosis
  • Siegfried Tuinier, The Netherlands
    Psychoses as an aspecific expression of disordered brain function
  • José Luis Vázquez-Barquero, Spain
    Effectiveness and metabolic alterations of conventional and atypical antipsychotics in first episode psychosis
  • Robin M Murray, UK
    The biology of drug induced psychosis

S3. COGNITIVE SYMPTOMS

  • Trevor Archer, Sweden
    Symptom-profiles under cognitive-affective deficit conditions
  • Antonio Lobo, Spain
    Non-cognitive symptoms predict cognitive decline and dementia in the elderly community
  • Jeremy Seamans, Canada
    What cellular mechanisms might underlie cognitive symptoms?
  • Jose Mª Delgado, Spain
    Functional basis of associative learning in wild type and transgenic mice
  • Lia Bevilaqua, Brazil
    Consolidation, reconsolidation and the persistence of memory
  • Ivan Izquierdo, Brazil
    Multiple parallel molecular cascades are in charge of memory formation; the failure of any one may be disruptive

S4. MOTOR EXPRESSIONS OF NEUROPSYCHIATRIC SYMPTOMS
In memory of Werner Schmidt

  • Richard Beninger and Trevor Archer
    Werner Schmidt: (1950-2007) Pushing the Envelope of Neuroscience: A True Academician and Complete Gentleman
  • Manfred Gerlach, USA
    Motor symptoms expressed by neuro-psychiatric diseases
  • Richard Kostrzewa, UK
    Stereotypic behaviours related to levels of receptor-sensitivity
  • Moussa Youdim, Israel
    Symptom-profile complexity in the movement disorders and their eventual containment

S5. NEUROPSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH IN SPAIN

  • REM-TAP: Spain New National Research Net for Psychiatric
    Disorders, Celso Arango and Françesc Artigas, Spain
  • Opportunities for International Collaborative Research with Spain
    Richard Benninger, Robin M. Murray and Peter Kalivas

S6. IMPULSIVITY

  • Giovanni Laviola, Italy
    Animal models and mechanisms of impulsivity in adolescence
  • Janet Hoenicka, Spain
    Behavioral disorders and the ANKK1 Kinase
  • Cesar Avila, Spain
    Impulsivity as sensitivity to reward: a cognitive neuroscience approach 14
  • Richard Beninger, Canada
    Dopamine receptor mechanisms of reward
  • Guillermo Ponce, Spain
    Genetics and learning in psychopathic traits
  • Peter Kalivas, USA
    Pathology in cortical regulation of habit circuits and loss of control

S7. ANHEDONIA AND AFFECT

  • Michel Le Moal, France
    Complex features of biobehavioral pathologies: difficulties for an experimental psychopathology
  • Ian Reid, UK
    Mood disorder and early life trauma: symptom profiles
  • Aleksander A. Mathe, Sweden
    Neurochemical effects of maternal separation
  • Mary Phillips, USA
    The neural basis of affect and anhedonia
  • Roy A. Wise, USA
    Dopamine and reward: the anhedonia hypothesis 30 years on

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