Personalidad y cerebroun encuentro inevitable
- Pedrero Pérez, Eduardo José
- Ruiz Sánchez de León, José María
- Llanero Luque, Marcos
ISSN: 0214-7823, 1886-1415
Año de publicación: 2015
Volumen: 36
Número: 1
Páginas: 54-61
Tipo: Artículo
Otras publicaciones en: Papeles del psicólogo
Resumen
La personalidad es un constructo que, hasta los últimos años, no había suscitado demasiado interés entre los neuropsicólogos. Sin embargo, durante la década pasada han proliferado los estudios interesados en buscar correlatos cerebrales, estructurales y funcionales de rasgos de personalidad propuestos por las distintas teorías, especialmente el modelo de los cinco grandes factores de personalidad. Se ha ido acumulando evidencia sobre el hecho de que los cinco rasgos se relacionan con localizaciones cerebrales concretas pudiendo, actualmente, trazar un mapa cerebral asociado a cada rasgo. Estudios más recientes relacionan a estos rasgos con la red cerebral por defecto, donde residiría el compendio de reglas implícitas de gestión (personalidad), que se iría formando durante la vida mediante mecanismos de �plasticidad dependiente de la experiencia�. Estas propuestas suponen el umbral de un cambio de paradigma que puede llevar el estudio de los �trastornos mentales� al territorio de las alteraciones en la conectividad cerebral.
Referencias bibliográficas
- Adelstein, J. S., Shehzad, Z., Mennes, M., DeYoung, C. G., Zuo, X. N., Kelly, C. et al. (2011). Personality is reflected in the brain’s intrinsic functional architecture. PloS ONE, 6, e27633.
- Bjørnebekk, A., Fjell, A. M., Walhovd, K. B., Grydeland, H., Torgersen, S. y Westlye, L. T. (2013). Neuronal correlates of the five factor model (FFM) of human personality: Multimodal imaging in a large healthy sample. Neuroimage, 65, 194-208.
- Block, J. A contrarian view of the five-factor approach to personality description. (1995). Psychological Bulletin, 117, 187-215.
- Block, J. (2001). Millennial contrarianism. Journal of Research in Personality, 35, 98-107.
- Block, J. (2010). The Five-Factor framing of personality and beyond: some ruminations. Psychological Inquiry, 21, 2-25.
- Brewer, J. A., Worhunsky, P. D., Gray, J. R., Tang, Y. Y., Weber, J. y Kober, H. (2011). Meditation experience is associated with differences in default mode network activity and connectivity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 108, 1-6.
- Buckner, R. L., Andrews-Hanna, J. R. y Schacter, D. L. (2008). The brain’s default network anatomy, function, and relevance to disease. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1124, 1-38.
- Canli, T. (2004). Functional brain mapping of extraversion and neuroticism: learning from individual differences in emotion Processing. Journal of Personality, 72, 1105-1132.
- Carere, C., Drent, P. J., Koolhaas, J. M. y Groothuis, T. G. G. (2010). Epigenetic effects on personality traits: early food provisioning and sibling competition. Behaviour, 142, 1329-1355.
- Caspi, A., McClay, J., Moffitt, T., Mill, J., Martin, J., Craig, I. W. et al. (2002). Role of genotype in the cycle of violence in maltreated children. Science, 297, 851-854.
- Costa, P. T. y McCrae, R. R. (1992). Revised NEO perso- nality inventory (NEO-PI-R) and the five factor inventory (NEO-FFI): Professional manual. Odessa, Florida: Psychological Assessment Resources Inc.
- DeYoung, C. G., Hirsh, J. B., Shane, M. S., Papademetris, X., Rajeevan, N. y Gray, J. R. (2010). Testing predictions from personality neuroscience: brain structure and the Big Five. Psychological Science, 21, 820- 828.
- Digman, J. M. (1989). Five robust trait dimensions: Development, stability, and utility. Journal of Personality, 57, 195-214.
- Eysenck, S. B. G., Eysenck, H. J. y Barrett, P. (1985). A revised version of the psychoticism scale. Personality and Individual Differences, 6, 21-29.
- Fox, M. D. y Greicius, M. (2010). Clinical applications of resting state functional connectivity. Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, 4, 19.
- Goldberg, L. R. (1992). The development of markers or the big five factor structure. Psychological Assessment, 4, 26-42.
- Greicius, M. D., Krasnow, B., Reiss, A. L. y Menon V. (2003). Functional connectivity in the resting brain: A network analysis of the default mode hypothesis. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 100, 253-258.
- Gray, J. A. (1970). The psychophysiological basis of introversion-extraversion. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 8, 249-266.
- Hebb, D. O. (1949). The organization of behavior: a neuropsychological theory. New York: Wiley & Sons Inc. Reedición por Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2009.
- Jafri, M. J., Pearlson, G. D., Stevens, M. y Calhoun, V. (2008). A method for functional network connectivity among spatially independent resting-state components in schizophrenia. Neuroimage, 39, 1666-1681.
- Kong, F., Hub, S., Xue, S., Song, Y. Y Liu, J. (2015). Extraversion mediates the relationship between structural variations in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and social well-being. Neuroimage, 105, 269-275.
- Kalbitzer, J., Frokjaer, V. G., Erritzoe, D., Svarer, C., Cumming, P., Nielsen, F. A. et al. (2009). The personality trait openness is related to cerebral 5-HTT levels. Neuroimage, 45, 280-285.
- Kaminskya, Z., Petronisa, A., Wanga, S. C., Levinea, B., Ghaffara, O., Floden, D. et al. (2008). Epigenetics of personality traits: an illustrative study of identical twins discordant for risk-taking behavior. Twin Research and Human Genetics, 11, 1-11.
- Krause-Utz, A., Veer, I. M., Rombouts, S. A., Bohus, M., Schmahl, C. y Elzinga, B. M. (2014). Amygdala and anterior cingulate resting-state functional connectivity in borderline personality disorder patients with a history of interpersonal trauma. Psychological Medicine, 44, 2889-2901.
- Lei, X., Zhao, Z. y Chen, H. (2013). Extraversion is encoded by scale-free dynamics of default mode network. Neuroimage, 74, 52-57.
- Lewis, G. J., Panizzon, M. S., Eyler, L., Fennema-Notestine, C., Chen, C. H., Neale, M. C. et al. (2014). Heritable influences on amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex contribute to genetic variation in core dimensions of personality. Neuroimage, 103, 309-315.
- McCrae, R. R. y Costa, T. P. (1997). Personality trait structure as a human universal. American Psychologist, 52, 509-516.
- O'Gorman, R. L., Kumari, V., Williams, S. C., Zelaya, F. O., Connor, S. E., Alsop, D. C. et al. (2006). Personality factors correlate with regional cerebral perfusion. Neuroimage, 31, 489-95.
- Omura, K., Constable, R. T. y Canli, T. (2005). Amygdala gray matter concentration is associated with extraversion and neuroticism. Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuropsychology, 16, 1905-1908.
- Passamonti, L., Terracciano, A., Riccelli, R., Donzuso, G., Cerasa, A., Vaccaro, M. et al. (2015). Increased functional connectivity within mesocortical networks in open people. Neuroimage, 104, 301-309.
- Peled, A. (2012). Personality disorders disturbances of the physical brain. Medical Hypotheses, 79, 487-492.
- Peled, A. (2013). Brain ‘‘Globalopathies’’ cause mental disorders. Medical Hypotheses, 81, 1046-1055.
- Petronis, A. (2010). Epigenetics as a unifying principle in the aetiology of complex traits and diseases. Nature, 465, 721-727.
- Raichle, M. E., MacLeod, A. M., Snyder, A. Z., Powers, W. J., Gusnardet, D. A. y Shulman, G. L. (2000). A default mode of brain function. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 98, 676-682.
- Raichle, M. E. y Snyder, A. Z. (2007). A default mode of brain function: A brief history of an evolving idea. Neuroimage, 37, 1083-1090.
- Raine, A. (2008). From genes to brain to antisocial behavior. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 17, 323-328.
- Sampaio, A., Soares, J. M., Coutinho, J., Sousa, N., Gonçalves, O. F. (2014). The Big Five default brain: functional evidence. Brain Structure and Function, 219, 1913-1922.
- Servaas, M. N., van der Velde, J., Costafreda, S. G.,
- Horton, P., Ormel, J., Riese, H. et al. (2013). Neuroticism and the brain: A quantitative meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies investigating emotion processing. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 37, 1518-1529.
- Smits, D. J. M. y Boeck, P. D. (2006). From BIS/BAS to the Big Five. European Journal of Personality, 20, 255-270.
- Sosic-Vasic, Z., Ulrich, M., Ruchsow, M., Vasic, N. y Grön, G. (2012). The modulating effect of personality traits on neural error monitoring: evidence from eventrelated fMRI. PLoS ONE, 7, e42930.
- Sperling, R. A., LaViolette, P. S., O'Keefe, K., O'Brien, J., Rentz, D. M., Pihlajamaki, M. et al. (2009). Amyloid deposition is associated with impaired default network function in older persons without dementia. Neuron, 63, 178-188.
- Strelau, J. (1997). The contribution of Pavlov's typology of CNS properties to personality research. European Psychologist, 2, 125-138.
- Tang, Y., Liao, J., Wang, W. y Luo, A. (2013). Identifying individuals with antisocial personality disorder using resting-state fMRI. PLoS ONE, 8, e60652.
- Van der Cruyssen, L., Heleven, E., Ma, N., Vandekerckhove, M., Van Overwalle, F. (2015). Distinct neural correlates of social categories and personality traits. Neuroimage, 104, 336-346.
- van Tol, M. J., Veer, I. M., van der Wee, N. J., Aleman, A., van Buchem, M. A., Rombouts, S. A et al. (2013). Whole-brain functional connectivity during emotional word classification in medication-free Major Depressive Disorder: Abnormal salience circuitry and relations to positive emotionality. NeuroImage: Clinical, 2, 790-796.
- Volkow, N. D., Tomasi, D., Wang, G. J., Fowler, J. S., Telang, F., Goldstein, R. Z. et al. (2011). Positive emotionality is associated with baseline metabolism in orbitofrontal cortex and in regions of the default network. Molecular Psychiatry, 16, 818-825.
- Wei, L., Duan, X., Yang, Y., Liao, W., Gao, Q., Ding, J. R. et al. (2011). The synchronization of spontaneous BOLD activity predicts extraversion and neuroticism. Brain Research, 1419, 68-75.
- Wolf, R. C., Sambataro, F., Vasic, N., Schmid, M., Thomann, P. A., Bienentreu, S. D. et al. (2011). Aberrant connectivity of resting-state networks in borderline personality disorder. Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience, 36, 402-411.
- Xu, J. y Potenza, M. N. (2012). White matter integrity and Five-Factor personality measures in healthy adults. Neuroimage, 59, 800-807.