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Full Description
Computational Psychiatry: Mathematical Modeling of Mental Illness is the first systematic effort to bring together leading scholars in the fields of psychiatry and computational neuroscience who have conducted the most impactful research and scholarship in this area. It includes an introduction outlining the challenges and opportunities facing the field of psychiatry that is followed by a detailed treatment of computational methods used in the service of understanding neuropsychiatric symptoms, improving diagnosis and guiding treatments.
This book provides a vital resource for the clinical neuroscience community with an in-depth treatment of various computational neuroscience approaches geared towards understanding psychiatric phenomena. Its most valuable feature is a comprehensive survey of work from leaders in this field.
Contents
Meeting Emerging Challenges and Opportunities in Psychiatry Through Computational Neuroscience
Section I. Applying Circuit Modeling to Understand Psychiatric Symptoms
1. Cortical Circuit Models in Psychiatry: Linking Disrupted Excitation-Inhibition Balance to Cognitive Deficits Associated with Schizophrenia
2. Serotonergic Modulation of Cognition in Prefrontal Cortical Circuits in Major Depression
3. Dopaminergic Neurons in the Ventral Tegmental Area and their Dysregulation in Nicotine Addiction
Section II. Modeling Neural System Disruptions in Psychiatric Illness
4. Computational Models of Dysconnectivity in Large-Scale Resting-State Networks
5. Dynamic Causal Modelling and its Application to Psychiatric Disorders
6. Systems Level Modeling of Cognitive Control in Psychiatric Disorders: A focus on schizophrenia
7. Computational Psychiatry: Mathematical Modeling of Mental Illness
Section III: Characterizing Complex Psychiatric Symptoms via Mathematical Models
8. A Case Study in Computational Psychiatry: Addiction as Failure Modes of the Decision-Making System
9. Modeling Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia
10. Bayesian Approaches to Learning and Decision Making
11. Computational Phenotypes Revealed by Interactive Economic Games