The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes

Clinical evidence suggests that three major patterns of disturbance of the supervisory mental processes that regulate self-generated mental activity can occur, either alone or together, in a variety of neurological and psychiatric conditions. Psychomotor poverty involves a diminished ability to init...

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Main Author: P. F. Liddle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 1993-01-01
Series:Behavioural Neurology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/BEN-1993-6102
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spelling doaj-3ced51939cdb4f5593165348b10119e22021-07-02T02:13:41ZengHindawi LimitedBehavioural Neurology0953-41801875-85841993-01-016151410.3233/BEN-1993-6102The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental ProcessesP. F. Liddle0Royal Postgraduate Medical School, Hammersmith Hospital, Ducane Rd, London W12 0HS, UKClinical evidence suggests that three major patterns of disturbance of the supervisory mental processes that regulate self-generated mental activity can occur, either alone or together, in a variety of neurological and psychiatric conditions. Psychomotor poverty involves a diminished ability to initiate activity. Psychomotor disorganization reflects impaired ability to select between activities. Reality distortion, which is manifest as delusions and hallucinations, appears to reflect an abnormality of internal monitoring of mental activity. Each of these three syndromes is associated with a specific pattern of disordered function in multimodal association cortex and related subcortical nuclei. The evidence suggests that the neurotransmitter dopamine plays a major role in modulating the supervisory mental processes, though serotonin and noradrenaline are also implicated. While a particular neurotransmitter might have conflicting influences on different syndromes, the differential involvement of different anatomic sites and different neuroreceptor types offers the possibility of successful treatment even when different syndromes co-exist.http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/BEN-1993-6102
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. F. Liddle
spellingShingle P. F. Liddle
The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes
Behavioural Neurology
author_facet P. F. Liddle
author_sort P. F. Liddle
title The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes
title_short The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes
title_full The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes
title_fullStr The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes
title_full_unstemmed The Psychomotor Disorders: Disorders of the Supervisory Mental Processes
title_sort psychomotor disorders: disorders of the supervisory mental processes
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Behavioural Neurology
issn 0953-4180
1875-8584
publishDate 1993-01-01
description Clinical evidence suggests that three major patterns of disturbance of the supervisory mental processes that regulate self-generated mental activity can occur, either alone or together, in a variety of neurological and psychiatric conditions. Psychomotor poverty involves a diminished ability to initiate activity. Psychomotor disorganization reflects impaired ability to select between activities. Reality distortion, which is manifest as delusions and hallucinations, appears to reflect an abnormality of internal monitoring of mental activity. Each of these three syndromes is associated with a specific pattern of disordered function in multimodal association cortex and related subcortical nuclei. The evidence suggests that the neurotransmitter dopamine plays a major role in modulating the supervisory mental processes, though serotonin and noradrenaline are also implicated. While a particular neurotransmitter might have conflicting influences on different syndromes, the differential involvement of different anatomic sites and different neuroreceptor types offers the possibility of successful treatment even when different syndromes co-exist.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/BEN-1993-6102
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