Bernard J A, Mittal V A
Department of Psychology & Neuroscience,University of Colorado Boulder,Boulder,CO,USA.
Department of Psychology,Northwestern University,Evanston,IL,USA.
Psychol Med. 2015 Oct;45(13):2685-9. doi: 10.1017/S0033291715000872. Epub 2015 May 25.
Within the NIMH Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework, dimensions of behavior are investigated across diagnoses with the goal of developing a better understanding of their underlying neural substrates. Currently, this framework includes five domains: cognitive, social, arousal/regulatory, negative, and positive valence systems. We argue that the inclusion of a motor systems domain is sorely needed as well. Independent of medication, distinct areas of motor dysfunction (e.g. motor planning/inhibition/learning/coordination, involuntary movements) commonly appear across a number of mental disorders (e.g. schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Alzheimer's disease, depression) as well as neurological disorders accompanied by significant psychological symptoms (e.g. Parkinson's disease). In addition, motor systems are amenable to study across multiple levels of analysis from the cellular molecular level focusing on cytoarchitechtonics and neurotransmitter systems, to networks and circuits measured using neuroimaging, and finally at the level of overt behavioral performance. Critically, the neural systems associated with motor performance have been relatively well defined, and different circuits have been linked to distinct aspects of motor behavior. As such, they may also be differentially associated with symptoms and motor dysfunction across diagnoses, and be uniquely informative about underlying etiology. Importantly, motor signs can change across stages of illness; they are also often present in the prodromal phases of disease and closely linked with course, suggesting that these behaviors represent a core feature reflective of pathogenic processes. The inclusion of a motor domain would allow researchers to better understand psychopathology more broadly, and may also reveal important contributions to disease processes across diagnoses.
在国家心理健康研究所研究领域标准(RDoC)框架内,对行为维度进行跨诊断研究,目的是更好地理解其潜在的神经基质。目前,该框架包括五个领域:认知、社交、唤醒/调节、消极和积极效价系统。我们认为,也迫切需要纳入一个运动系统领域。与药物无关,运动功能障碍的不同区域(如运动计划/抑制/学习/协调、不自主运动)通常出现在多种精神障碍(如精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、自闭症、注意力缺陷多动障碍、阿尔茨海默病、抑郁症)以及伴有明显心理症状的神经障碍(如帕金森病)中。此外,运动系统适合从细胞分子水平(关注细胞构筑和神经递质系统)到使用神经影像学测量的网络和回路,再到明显行为表现水平的多个分析层面进行研究。至关重要的是,与运动表现相关的神经系统已经相对明确,不同的回路与运动行为的不同方面相关联。因此,它们在不同诊断中也可能与症状和运动功能障碍有不同的关联,并能为潜在病因提供独特的信息。重要的是,运动体征会在疾病的不同阶段发生变化;它们也经常出现在疾病的前驱期,并与病程密切相关,这表明这些行为代表了反映致病过程的核心特征。纳入运动领域将使研究人员能够更广泛地更好地理解精神病理学,也可能揭示不同诊断中对疾病过程的重要贡献。