ADHD as a Model of Brain-behavior Relationships
Koziol, Leonard F.; Budding, Deborah Ely; Chidekel, Dana
ADHD as a Model of Brain-Behavior Relationships
Leonard F. Koziol, Deborah Ely Budding, and Dana Chidekel
Series Title: Springer Briefs in Neuroscience
Subseries: The Vertically Organized Brain in Theory and Practice
It's been a basic neurological given: the brain does our thinking, and has evolved to do the thinking, as controlled by the neocortex. In this schema, all dysfunction can be traced to problems in the brain’s lateral interactions. But in scientific reality, is this really true? Challenging this traditional cortico-centric view is a body of research emphasizing the role of the structures that control movement-the brain's vertical organization-in behavioral symptoms.
Using a well-known, ... Read more
- The diagnosis of ADHD: history and context.
- ADHD and neuropsychological nomenclature
- Research Domain Criteria: a dimensional approach to evaluating disorder
- The development of motor skills, executive function, and a relation to ADHD
- The role of the cerebellum in cognition, emotion, motivation, and dysfunction
- How large-scale brain networks interact
Heralding a more accurate future of assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of neurodevelopmentaldisorders, ADHD as a Model of Brain-Behavior Relationships represents a major step forward for neuropsychologists, child psychologists, and psychiatrists, or any related profession interested in a neuroscientific understanding of brain function.
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