44 2033180199
All submissions of the EM system will be redirected to Online Manuscript Submission System. Authors are requested to submit articles directly to Online Manuscript Submission System of respective journal.
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry and Neuroscience

Sign up for email alert when new content gets added: Sign up

Biological structures of personality in brain/behavioral systems

Author(s): Bianca Jones*

This article is an introduction to the theory of personality that emphasizes the different evolution of reward and punishment mechanisms in the brain of vertebrates. The three brain/behavioural systems that are believed to underlie personality differences are: (1) the behavioural activation system, which represents sensitivity to reward cues, (2) the behavioural inhibition system, which is responsible for responding to punishment cues, and (3) the fight/flight system, which is related to unconditioned aversive experiences.

Gray believes that the dimensions of extroversion and neuroticism in Eysenck's theory should have (approximately) a 30-degree rotation, to form the two primary dimensions of anxiety and irritability. He also believes that the hypothesis derived from the theory of introversionextroversion, according to which conditioning is more in introverts, should give way to a belief that emphasizes the greater sensitivity of introverts to the signs of punishment and the lack of frustrating rewards.


Full-Text | PDF
 
Google Scholar citation report
Citations : 60

Journal of Clinical Psychiatry and Neuroscience received 60 citations as per Google Scholar report

pulsus-health-tech
Top