Evaluating the Validity of Animal Models of Mental Disorder: From Modeling Syndromes to Modeling Endophenotypes
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| Publication date | 12-2022 |
| Journal | History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences |
| Article number | 59 |
| Volume | Issue number | 44 | 4 |
| Number of pages | 26 |
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| Abstract |
This paper provides a historical analysis of a shift in the way animal
models of mental disorders were conceptualized: the shift from the
mid-twentieth-century view, adopted by some, that animal models model
syndromes classified in manuals such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM),
to the later widespread view that animal models model component parts
of psychiatric syndromes. I argue that in the middle of the twentieth
century the attempt to maximize the face validity of animal models
sometimes led to the pursuit of the ideal of an animal model that
represented a behaviorally defined psychiatric syndrome as described in
manuals such as the DSM. I show how developments within psychiatric genetics and related criticism of the DSM
in the 1990s and 2000s led to the rejection of this ideal and how
researchers in the first decade of the twenty-first century came to
believe that animal models of mental disorders should model component
parts of mental disorders, adopting a so-called endophenotype approach.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1007/s40656-022-00537-4 |
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