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Journal ArticleDOI

Constructing constructs for psychopathology: the NIMH research domain criteria.

TLDR
A description of the impetus for the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health's (NIMH) Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative is described and an update of progress on that initiative to date is provided.
Abstract
As a commentary for the special section on Reconceptualizing the Classification of Mental Disorders, this article begins with a description of the impetus for the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health's (NIMH) Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative and provides an update of progress on that initiative to date. The commentary then engages the articles in this special section, beginning with a response to Berenbaum's concern that the RDoC approach to sorting constructs across multiple units of analysis espouses a de facto biological fundamentalism. This leads us to delineate the relationship between RDoC and the NIMH priorities relevant to this initiative. The commentary then considers how Patrick's iterative "construct-network" method can be applied to RDoC construct validation, highlighting several aspects that are particularly useful. One aspect of this work involves determining subject inclusion and exclusion criteria that provide an appropriate range of variance. Finally, this commentary considers the Bilder group's article, explicating the ways in which multilevel models can foster development of hypotheses and informatics approaches needed for further RDoC progress.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP): A Dimensional Alternative to Traditional Nosologies

TL;DR: The HiTOP promises to improve research and clinical practice by addressing the aforementioned shortcomings of traditional nosologies and provides an effective way to summarize and convey information on risk factors, etiology, pathophysiology, phenomenology, illness course, and treatment response.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep and mental disorders: A meta-analysis of polysomnographic research.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis aimed at determining the polysomnographic characteristics of several mental disorders found sleep depth and REM pressure alterations were associated with affective, anxiety, autism and schizophrenia disorders, and comorbidity was associated with enhanced REM sleep pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

The NIMH Research Domain Criteria Initiative: Background, Issues, and Pragmatics.

TL;DR: A number of theoretical and methodological issues that can arise in connection with the nature of RDoC constructs are highlighted: subjectivism and heterophenomenology, desynchrony and theoretical neutrality among units of analysis, theoretical reductionism, endophenotypes, biomarkers, neural circuits, construct "grain size," and analytic challenges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterizing a psychiatric symptom dimension related to deficits in goal-directed control

TL;DR: Using large-scale online assessment of psychiatric symptoms and neurocognitive performance in two independent general-population samples, it was found that deficits in goal-directed control were most strongly associated with a symptom dimension comprising compulsive behavior and intrusive thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

A hierarchical causal taxonomy of psychopathology across the life span.

TL;DR: This causal taxonomy implies the need for changes in strategies for studying the etiology, psychobiology, prevention, and treatment of psychopathology, and provides a novel framework for understanding the heterogeneity of each first-order dimension.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Using genetic data in cognitive neuroscience: from growing pains to genuine insights

TL;DR: Using neuroimaging and other methods, this approach is poised to make the transition from health-focused investigations to inquiries into cognitive, affective and social functions, including ones that do not readily lend themselves to animal models.
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Mistreating Psychology in the Decades of the Brain

TL;DR: This article explores three contentions: that the dominant discourse in modern cognitive, affective, and clinical neuroscience assumes that the authors know how psychology/biology causation works when they do not, and that crucial scientific and clinical progress will be stymied as long as psychology, biology, and their relationship are frame in currently dominant ways.
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The anxiety spectrum and the reflex physiology of defense: from circumscribed fear to broad distress.

TL;DR: Adaptive defensive engagement during imagery may be compromised by long‐term dysphoria and stress—a phenomenon with implications for prognosis and treatment planning.
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A construct-network approach to bridging diagnostic and physiological domains: application to assessment of externalizing psychopathology.

TL;DR: A construct-network approach is proposed in which psychometric operationalizations of key neurobehavioral constructs serve as anchors for identifying neural indicators of psychopathology-relevant dispositions, and as vehicles for bridging between domains of clinical problems and neurophysiology.
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