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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $104.50

Format:
Hardback
456 pp.
171 mm x 246 mm

ISBN-13:
9780198793014

Publication date:
May 2019

Imprint: OUP UK


Genes, brain, and emotions

Interdisciplinary and Translational Perspectives

Edited by Andrei C. Miu, Judith R. Homberg and Klaus-Peter Lesch

Series : Series in Affective Science

The study of emotions has rapidly expanded in recent decades, incorporating interdisciplinary research on the genetic underpinnings and neural mechanisms of emotion. This has involved a wide range of methods from as varied fields as behavioral genetics, molecular biology, and cognitive neuroscience, and has allowed researchers to start addressing complex multi-level questions such as: what is the role of genes in individual differences in emotions and emotional vulnerability to psychopathology, and what are the neural mechanisms through which genes and experience shape these emotion?

Genes, Brain, and Emotions: Interdisciplinary and translational perspectives offers a comprehensive account of this interdisciplinary field of research, bridging psychology, genetics, and neuroscience, with rich sections dedicated to methods, cognitive and biological mechanisms, and psychopathology. Written by leading researchers who have each inspired new research directions and innovated methods and concepts, this book will be of interest to anyone working or studying in the field of affective science, whether they be behavioural geneticists, psychologists and psychiatrists, or cognitive neuroscientists.

Readership : Students and researchers in the affective sciences, neuroscience, psychology, behavioural genetics, and cognitive neuroscience.

List of Contributors
1. Andrei C. Miu, Judith R. Homberg, and Klaus-Peter Lesch: Introduction to Genes, Brain and Emotions. Interdisciplinary and Translational Perspectives
Part One: Methods and Approaches
2. Megan Flom, and Kimberly J. Saudino: Twin Studies of Emotion
3. Suzanne Vrshek-Schallhorn, Bradley M. Avery, and Vaibhav Sapuram: Gene-environment interactions in humans across multiple units of analyses: A focus on psychopathology and imaging
4. Jenny van Dongen, and Dorret I. Boomsma: Epigenetics and twin studies: A review and applications in human aggressive behavior
5. Thomas W. Mühleisen, and Sven Cichon: Genome-wide association studies
6. Daniela Felice, Anand Gururajan, Olivia O'Leary, and John F. Cryan: Gene by environment interactions in animal models of depression and anxiety
7. Celine L. St. Pierre, Kayvon Sharif, Emily Funsten, Abraham A. Palmer, and Clarissa C Parker: Methods and Theoretical Approaches: Genetic Animal Models of Emotional Disorders and Convergence with Human Data
8. Alexandre Surget, and Catherine Belzung: Optogenetic and chemogenetic technologies for advanced functional investigations of the neural correlates of emotions
Part Two: Cognitive Mechanisms
9. Tina B. Lonsdorf: Fear learning and extinction
10. Inge Volman, Hanneke Den Ouden, and Karin Roelofs: Emotional action control: the role of serotonin in health and disease
11. Andrei C. Miu, and Mirela I. Bîlc: Genetics of emotion regulation: A systematic review
12. Mana R. Ehlers, and Rebecca M. Todd: Emotional Memory
13. Joshua C. Gray, Sandra Sanchez-Roige, Abraham A. Palmer, Harriet de Wit, and James MacKillop: Genetics of decision making
Part Three: Biological Mechanisms
14. Turhan Canli: Missing heritability in studies of trait anxiety and amygdala function: Is the solution in plain sight?
15. Erik M. Mueller: Electrocortical endophenotypes of anxiety
16. Ulrich Rabl, and Lukas Pezawas: Imaging genetics in depression
17. Idan Shalev, and Waylon J. Hastings: Psychosocial Stress and Telomere Regulation
18. Annette Conzelmann, Paul Pauli, Alexander Prehn-Kristensen, and Tobias Renner: Genetic effects on peripheral psychophysiological measures of emotion processing
Part Four: Disorders and Therapy
19. Thomas J. Bouchard, Jr., Wendy Johnson, and Irving I. Gottesman: The Genetics of Personality/Psychopathology: A Brief Review of Constructs, Results, Approaches and Implications
20. Rebecca Alexander, and Justine Megan Gatt: Resilience
21. Joan Kaufman, Janitza L. Montalvo-Ortiz, and Richard Lee: Understanding Risk and Resilience in Maltreated Children: Emerging Findings From Translational, Genetic, Neuroimaging, and Treatment Studies
22. Lisa Heltzel, and Judith R. Homberg: Animal models of posttraumatic stress disorder: Towards understanding of individual differences
23. Dan Rujescu, and Ina Giegling: Genetics of impulsivity, anger and aggression as risk factors for suicidal behavior
24. Tatjana van Strien: Causes of distress-induced emotional eating
25. Nuno R. Zilhão, Dorret I. Boomsma, Dirk J.A. Smit, and Danielle C. Cath: Genetics of obsessive-compulsive disorder and Tourette's syndrome
26. Jonathan R.I. Coleman, Kathryn J. Lester, and Thalia C. Eley: Therapygenetics: Predicting psychological treatment response from genetic markers
27. Airiss R. Chan, Ilona Gorbovskaya, and Daniel J. Müller: The Role of Pharmacogenetics in the Treatment of Depression

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Andrei C. Miu is Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience and Behavioral Genetics at the Department of Psychology, Babes-Bolyai University, and the Founding Director of the Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, one of the leading research groups in the field of cognitive and affective science in Romania. His research investigates the psychological and biological mechanisms of emotion and emotion regulation, with the aim of uncovering individual differences that contribute to risk for psychopathology.

Dr. Judith Homberg obtained her PhD in 2004 at the Free University Medical Center in Amsterdam on preclinical research aiming to understand individual differences in vulnerability to drug addiction. Then she pursued a postdoc position at the Hubrecht Institute in Utrecht and generated and characterized knockout rats. One of the knockout rats involved the serotonin transporter knockout rat, which displays heightened emotional behaviour. After obtaining a personal subsidy from the Dutch government she started her own research group at the Donders Institute in Nijmegen in 2008. From this position she further built up her current research group focussing on the individual differences in behaviour and risk for stress-related disorders, with serotonin as main modulator.

Dr. Lesch has undergone training in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy. His work has been focussing on the interdependent relationship between molecular, cellular and systems neurobiology and mechanisms of pharmacologic and psychotherapeutic treatments related to neurodevelopmental and life-spanning psychiatric disorders using interdisciplinary and translational research strategies. In its scope, the Lesch lab's work is regarded as an interface with contributions to bridging the sizeable gap between basic molecular, neurobiologic and clinically applicable research. The work uncompromisingly integrates pertinent research strategies to elucidate mechanisms of pathologically altered synaptic plasticity (synaptopathy), intraneuronal signaling (neuronal dysregulation) and interneuronal communication (system dysfunction) as well as their impact on the pathophysiology of neuropsychiatric disease.

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Special Features

  • Unique in integrating research in genetics with the field of affective science, providing us with a broader and richer understanding of emotion.
  • Includes chapters by leading researchers who have inspired new research directions, and innovated methods and concepts.
  • Offers a comprehensive introduction to recent interdisciplinary research on genetic influences and neural mechanisms of emotion.