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. 2022 Aug 22:13:943049.
doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.943049. eCollection 2022.

Why mental disorders are brain disorders. And why they are not: ADHD and the challenges of heterogeneity and reification

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Why mental disorders are brain disorders. And why they are not: ADHD and the challenges of heterogeneity and reification

Stephan Schleim. Front Psychiatry. .

Abstract

Scientific attempts to identify biomarkers to reliably diagnose mental disorders have thus far been unsuccessful. This has inspired the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) approach which decomposes mental disorders into behavioral, emotional, and cognitive domains. This perspective article argues that the search for biomarkers in psychiatry presupposes that the present mental health categories reflect certain (neuro-) biological features, that is, that these categories are reified as biological states or processes. I present two arguments to show that this assumption is very unlikely: First, the heterogeneity (both within and between subjects) of mental disorders is grossly underestimated, which is particularly salient for an example like Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Second, even the search for the biological basis of psychologically more basic categories (cognitive and emotional processes) than the symptom descriptions commonly used in mental disorder classifications has thus far been inconclusive. While philosophers have discussed this as the problem of mind-body-reductionism for ages, Turkheimer presented a theoretical framework comparing weak and strong biologism which is more useful for empirical research. This perspective article concludes that mental disorders are brain disorders in the sense of weak, but not strong biologism. This has important implications for psychiatric research: The search for reliable biomarkers for mental disorder categories we know is unlikely to ever be successful. This implies that biology is not the suitable taxonomic basis for psychiatry, but also psychology at large.

Keywords: ADHD; biologism; essentialism; heterogeneity; mental disorders; pragmatism; reductionism; reification.

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Conflict of interest statement

The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The scheme distinguishes a hierarchy from experiences (phenomena), behaviors, and body features to symptoms and disorder categories on the left side and a hierarchy in the brain from single cells to cell assemblies and whole brain networks on the right side. Note that the hierarchy on the left describes a relationship of conceptual abstraction, that is, symptom descriptions are intended to cover patients' actual states and processes and then combined into complex mental disorder classifications. By contrast, the hierarchy on the right describes a part-whole relationship (mereology) of actual things. The light and dark shaded gray backgrounds illustrate the difference between a more primary and more abstract reality: entities in the former are less dependent from our way of describing or classifying them as such. For the example of ADHD, phenomena/behaviors could be a girl's daydreaming or a boy's running around in class, which are subsumed under more general symptom descriptions by clinical experts and eventually codified as the disorder category. Strong biologism would require a strong correspondence between the entities on the left and the right side, but the disorders' heterogeneity and conceptual irreducibility make this very unlikely.

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