PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stuck in neutral: Brain defect traps schizophrenics in twilight zone

2014-08-17
(Press-News.org) People with schizophrenia struggle to turn goals into actions because brain structures governing desire and emotion are less active and fail to pass goal-directed messages to cortical regions affecting human decision-making, new research reveals.

Published in Biological Psychiatry, the finding by a University of Sydney research team is the first to illustrate the inability to initiate goal-directed behaviour common in people with schizophrenia.

The finding may explain why people with schizophrenia have difficulty achieving real-world goals such as making friends, completing education and finding employment.

"The apparent lack of motivation in schizophrenic patients isn't because they lack goals or don't enjoy rewards and pleasure," says the University of Sydney's Dr Richard Morris, the study's lead author. "They enjoy as many experiences as other people, including food, movies and scenes of natural beauty.

"What appears to block them are specific brain deficits that prevent them from converting their desires and goals into choices and behaviour."

Using a control group research design, the researchers used a two-prong approach to reveal how and why schizophrenics fail to convert their preferences into congruent choices.

First, using a series of experiments involving choosing between different snack food rewards, experimenters revealed that:

schizophrenic subjects had a liking for snack foods equivalent to healthy adults when researchers reduced the value of one of the snacks, both subjects and healthy adults subsequently preferred different snacks, as expected surprisingly, schizophrenic subjects had major difficulty choosing their preferred snack when provided with a choice between their preferred snack and the devalued snack.

Second, researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to measures brain activity while study subjects performed learning tasks involving snack foods. This technique relies on the fact that cerebral blood flow and neuronal activity are coupled.

When an area of the brain is in use, bloodflow to that region increases, thereby indicating neural activity. This neural activity can be presented graphically by colour-coding the strength of activation across the brain or in specific brain regions. The technique can localise neural activity to within millimetres.

Functional MRI results revealed the following:

schizophrenic subjects had normal neural activity in the brain region responsible for decision-making (prefrontal cortex) among schizophrenic subjects, brain regions responsible, in part, for controlling actions and choice (the caudate) had far lower neural activity than in healthy subjects lower neural activity in the caudate regions was correlated with the difficulty that schizophrenic subjects' had applying their food preferences to obtain future snack foods.

"Pathology in the caudate and associated brain regions may prevent schizophrenic subjects from properly evaluating their desires then transmitting that information to guide their behavior," says Dr Morris.

"This means that desires and goals are intact in people with schizophrenia, however they have difficulty choosing the right course of action to achieve those goals.

"This failure to integrate desire with action means people with schizophrenia are stuck in limbo, wanting a normal life but unable to take the necessary steps to achieve it."

Schizophrenia affects one per cent of people worldwide, including in Australia. However so-called "poor motivation" in schizophrenia is a major economic concern because it is not treated by current medicines, and often means patients fail to finish their education or hold a full-time job.

INFORMATION:

Research paper
Richard W. Morris, Stephanie Quail, Kristi Griffiths, Melissa J. Green, Bernard W. Balleine Corticostriatal control of goal-directed action is impaired in schizophrenia, Biological Psychiatry


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Virginity pledges for men can lead to sexual confusion -- even after the wedding day

2014-08-17
Bragging of sexual conquests, suggestive jokes and innuendo, and sexual one-upmanship can all be a part of demonstrating one's manhood, especially for young men eager to exert their masculinity. But how does masculinity manifest itself among young men who have pledged sexual abstinence before marriage? How do they handle sexual temptation, and what sorts of challenges crop up once they're married? "Sexual purity and pledging abstinence are most commonly thought of as feminine, something girls and young women promise before marriage," said Sarah Diefendorf, a sociology ...

Study finds range of skills students taught in school linked to race and class size

2014-08-17
SAN FRANCISCO -- Pressure to meet national education standards may be the reason states with significant populations of African-American students and those with larger class sizes often require children to learn fewer skills, finds a University of Kansas researcher. "The skills students are expected to learn in schools are not necessarily universal," said Argun Saatcioglu, a KU associate professor of education and courtesy professor of sociology. In effort to increase their test scores and, therefore, avoid the negative consequences of failing to meet the federal standards ...

Study suggests federal law to combat use of 'club drugs' has done more harm than good

2014-08-17
SAN FRANCISCO — A federal law enacted to combat the use of "club drugs" such as Ecstasy — and today's variation known as Molly — has failed to reduce the drugs' popularity and, instead, has further endangered users by hampering the use of measures to protect them. University of Delaware sociology professor Tammy L. Anderson makes that case in a paper she will present at the 109th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. The paper, which has been accepted for publication this fall in the American Sociological Association journal Contexts, examines the unintended ...

Risky situations increase women's anxiety, hurt their performance compared to men

2014-08-17
SAN FRANCISCO — Risky situations increase anxiety for women but not for men, leading women to perform worse under these circumstances, finds a study to be presented at the 109th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. "On the surface, risky situations may not appear to be particularly disadvantageous to women, but these findings suggest otherwise," said study author Susan R. Fisk, a doctoral candidate in sociology at Stanford University, who defines a risky situation as any setting with an uncertain outcome in which there can be both positive or negative ...

Most temporary workers from Mexico no better off than undocumented workers

Most temporary workers from Mexico no better off than undocumented workers
2014-08-17
SAN FRANCISCO -- Many politicians see the temporary worker program in the U.S. as a solution to undocumented immigration from Mexico. But an Indiana University study finds that these legal workers earn no more than undocumented immigrants, who unlike their legal counterparts can improve their situation by changing jobs or negotiating for better pay. "Just because temporary workers are legally present in the country does not mean that they will have better jobs or wages than undocumented workers," said Lauren Apgar, lead researcher of the study "Temporary Worker Advantages? ...

Bone chemistry reveals royal lifestyle of Richard III

Bone chemistry reveals royal lifestyle of Richard III
2014-08-17
Oxford, August 17, 2014 - A recent study by the British Geological Survey, in association with researchers at the University of Leicester, has delved into the bone and tooth chemistry of King Richard III and uncovered fascinating new details about the life and diet of Britain's last Plantagenet king. The study, published in Elsevier's Journal of Archaeological Science indicates a change in diet and location in his early childhood, and in later life, a diet filled with expensive, high status food and drink. This forensic study, the most complete to have been conducted on ...

'Getting-by girls' straddle gap between academic winners and losers

2014-08-17
Everyone notices the academic superstars and failures, but what about the tens of millions of American teens straddling these two extremes? A new study from the University of California, Berkeley, has spotlighted a high school subculture that has made an art of slacking – even with ample educational resources – and may be destined to perpetuate the nation's struggling lower-middle class. UC Berkeley sociologist Michele Rossi studied white teenage girls in their last year of a well-funded high school. What she found was a group she dubbed "getting-by girls," whose coping ...

Study identifies factors that contribute to food trucks' fast spread

2014-08-16
ANN ARBOR---They're not your father's lowbrow roach coaches serving up greasy burgers and bad dogs. Today's gourmet food trucks peddle sushi, hybrid Korean tacos and other dishes that combine different types of cuisine to create a highbrow dining experience for foodies in search of eclectic, local eats. That's the take of researchers from the University of Michigan and Northwestern University who harvested Twitter data to conduct a de facto census of up-scale U.S. food trucks, invented in Los Angeles in 2008. "Virtually all these trucks are online and use Twitter to ...

Middle-aged women missing passion (and sex) seek affairs, not divorce

2014-08-16
SAN FRANCISCO — When middle-aged women seek extra-marital affairs, they are looking for more romantic passion, which includes sex — and don't want to divorce their husbands, suggests new research to be presented at the 109th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. "Being happy in marriage is far different than being happy in bed," said Eric Anderson, a professor of masculinity, sexuality, and sport at the University of Winchester in England and the chief science officer at AshleyMadison.com, a popular website for those interested in having extra-marital ...

For men in pink-collar jobs, a tradeoff: Lower pay, more job security

2014-08-16
SAN FRANCISCO — Is a man without a four-year college degree better off trying to land a well-paying but insecure job in traditionally male fields such as manufacturing or construction, or should he consider lower-paying but steadier employment in a female-dominated field? Janette Dill, a University of Akron sociology professor, and her colleagues try to answer that question in a new study she will present at the 109th Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association. "It's such a hard labor market if you don't have a college degree," Dill says. "You're just ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A new anticoagulant with no risk of bleeding

Genetic adaptations have impacted the blood compositions of two populations from Papua New Guinea

Abrupt permafrost thaw intensifies warming effects on soil CO2 emission

Scientists discover over 100 new genomic regions linked to blood pressure

Researchers identify over 2,000 genetic signals linked to blood pressure in study of over one million people

Scientists find cancer-like features in atherosclerosis, spurring opportunity for new treatment approaches

A virus could help save billions of gallons of wastewater produced by fracking

MSD joins the Open Targets consortium

U of T researchers target neurogenesis in new approach to treat Parkinson’s disease

Microbiome researchers challenge the state of the art in colon cancer biomarker discovery

Unveiling nature's custodians: groundbreaking study highlights crucial role of scavengers in wetlands

Data scarcity challenges identification of endocrine disruptors

A significant portion of the world’s population continues to trust vaccines, says survey in 23 countries

Clumps of this molecule inhibit strep’s DNA-cleaving enzymes

Cars as particles

Let widgeongrass be a weed in the seagrass yard -- making seagrass restoration more resistant to rising temperatures using generalist grasses

Group sales incentives boost weak brand sales, study finds

The double-fanged adolescence of saber-toothed cats

COVID-19-induced financial hardships reveal mental health struggles

Healthy lifestyle may offset effects of life-shortening genes by 60%+

Frequent teen vaping might boost risk of toxic lead and uranium exposure

Fentanyl inhalation may cause potentially irreversible brain damage, warn doctors

OHSU patient is world’s first documented case of brain disease from fentanyl inhalation

Microarray patches safe and effective for vaccinating children, trial shows

Montana State scientists’ research on RNA editing illuminates possible lifesaving treatments for genetic diseases

UC Irvine astronomers’ simulations support dark matter theory

Rensselaer researcher publishes groundbreaking study on labor market discrimination against transgender people

What's new in transportation data at PSU?

Ten-minute breath test to monitor antibiotic concentrations

Antimicrobial resistance prevalence varies by age and sex in bloodstream infections in European hospitals

[Press-News.org] Stuck in neutral: Brain defect traps schizophrenics in twilight zone