Taking the evolutionary development of the forebrain as a starting point, the authors developed a biological framework for the subcortical regulation of human emotional behaviour which may offer an explanation for the pathogenesis of the principle symptoms of mental disorders. Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behaviour are essential for all free-moving animals to stay alive and to have offspring. Even the oldest ocean-dwelling animal creatures, living about 560 million years ago and human ancestors, must therefore have been capable of generating these behaviours. Our earliest vertebrate ancestors, with a brain comparable with the modern lamprey, had a sophisticated extrapyramidal system generating...
According to our model, the motivation for appetitive-searching vs. distress-avoiding behaviors is r...
Background: Previously, the authors have developed a model of how reward-seeking and distress- avoid...
Contains fulltext : 169978.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A recently deve...
Taking the evolutionary development of the forebrain as a starting point, the authors developed a bi...
Taking the evolutionary development of the forebrain as a starting point, the authors developed a bi...
Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behavior are essential ...
A recently developed model describes how evolutionary old neuronal systems allow freemoving animals,...
The very first free-moving animals in the oceans over 540 million years ago must have been able to o...
The habenula, which in humans is a small nuclear complex within the epithalamus, plays an essential ...
Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behavior are essential ...
Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behavior are essential ...
The very first free-moving animals in the oceans over 540 million years ago must have been able to o...
A recently developed anatomical model describes how the intensity of reward-seeking and misery-fleei...
A recently developed model describes how evolutionary old neuronal systems allow freemoving animals,...
According to our model, the motivation for appetitive-searching vs. distress-avoiding behaviors is r...
Background: Previously, the authors have developed a model of how reward-seeking and distress- avoid...
Contains fulltext : 169978.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A recently deve...
Taking the evolutionary development of the forebrain as a starting point, the authors developed a bi...
Taking the evolutionary development of the forebrain as a starting point, the authors developed a bi...
Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behavior are essential ...
A recently developed model describes how evolutionary old neuronal systems allow freemoving animals,...
The very first free-moving animals in the oceans over 540 million years ago must have been able to o...
The habenula, which in humans is a small nuclear complex within the epithalamus, plays an essential ...
Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behavior are essential ...
Appetitive-searching (reward-seeking) and distress-avoiding (misery-fleeing) behavior are essential ...
The very first free-moving animals in the oceans over 540 million years ago must have been able to o...
A recently developed anatomical model describes how the intensity of reward-seeking and misery-fleei...
A recently developed model describes how evolutionary old neuronal systems allow freemoving animals,...
According to our model, the motivation for appetitive-searching vs. distress-avoiding behaviors is r...
Background: Previously, the authors have developed a model of how reward-seeking and distress- avoid...
Contains fulltext : 169978.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)A recently deve...