Medical Serotonin, Dopamine, Glutamate, and the others

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Medical doctors, particularly psychiatrists and neurologists, cannot accurately predict which neurons will activate based solely on an individual's genetic sequencing. While genetics can indicate a predisposition to certain behaviors, such as a higher likelihood of developing depression in families with a history of the disorder, it does not determine behavior definitively. Environmental factors, such as childhood experiences, play a significant role in shaping behavior. The conversation highlights the complexity of human behavior, emphasizing that neural connectivity is influenced by both genetics and life experiences. Research in neuroscience focuses more on the statistical behavior of large populations of neurons rather than individual neuron activation based on genetics. While genetics is important for understanding neural connectivity, the intricate nature of human behavior requires a broader approach that includes environmental influences and statistical modeling rather than relying solely on genetic information.
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Are medical doctors (psychiatrists/neurologists) able to predict which neurons will activate given the genetic sequencing of a certain individual? In turn, causing someone to act a certain way.
 
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No. Behaviour of a person is very complex and depends on more than just genetic sequencing.

That doesn't mean we can make some predictions. For example, if a person is born in a family with depression problems, then there is a large chance that he will get depression as well. However, that doesn't mean that he WILL get depression.

Much of the behaviour of a person comes also from his environment. Somebody who was abused as a child will have other behaviour than somebody who had a perfect childhood.
 
I suffer from really bad OCD & Anxiety. I would love nothing more that to be part of the research team. I would love to do all kinds of medical research but I am an engineer, not a biochem/chem/biology major.
 
JaredPM said:
I suffer from really bad OCD & Anxiety. I would love nothing more that to be part of the research team. I would love to do all kinds of medical research but I am an engineer, not a biochem/chem/biology major.

why did you choose engineering instead then? better job perspective? more hands on experience? more relevant to your daily life? Is it too late for you to transition into biomedical engineering?
 
JaredPM said:
Are medical doctors (psychiatrists/neurologists) able to predict which neurons will activate given the genetic sequencing of a certain individual? In turn, causing someone to act a certain way.

Which neurons will activate when? And where?
Mind you, neural connectivity isn't determined by genetics, so the answer is no, Research in this area (which is largely the domain of cognitive/computational neuroscience, not psychiatry or neurology) is almost always concerned with the statistical behaviour/dynamics of large populations of neurons.
 
Number Nine said:
Which neurons will activate when? And where?
Mind you, neural connectivity isn't determined by genetics, so the answer is no,

Wooo, that is too strong a statement. Genetics is very important for neural connectivity, work in C. elegans or Drosophila have identified many genes that are involved. How would you expect the brain to form when there are no instructions? Behavior of simple organisms can be predicted by the neurons that are stimulated. Humans are many orders of magnitude more complex, we are far from understanding the human brain.
 
Monique said:
Wooo, that is too strong a statement. Genetics is very important for neural connectivity, work in C. elegans or Drosophila have identified many genes that are involved. How would you expect the brain to form when there are no instructions? Behavior of simple organisms can be predicted by the neurons that are stimulated. Humans are many orders of magnitude more complex, we are far from understanding the human brain.

Too strong, yes, but largely accurate for this particular question. The connectivity involved in local (i.e. neural ensembles) computations is so profoundly influenced by experience and environment that the genetic code will provide next to no insight if your goal is to "predict which neurones are firing" with the goal of predicting specific actions. The formation of most individual connections between neurons is largely algorithmic (where neurons are just following some instruction set that determines their connectivity based on their activity, and the activity of surrounding neurons and glia). If you want to understand what clusters of neurones are actually computing, you need statistics and dynamical systems, not genetics.
 
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