A little strange is not wrong. Because people think that mental disorders are continuous, people may worry when their thinking and behavior are inconsistent with idealized notions of health. However, in a recent review published in the journal Cognitive Science Trends, the researchers said that some variants may be healthy or even adaptable. Although it may also complicate the identification of standardized markers of pathology.
"I think there is no fixed standard. "Each of our actions has a certain degree of variability," said Avram Holmes, a senior author and clinical psychologist at Yale University. "Health change is the" raw food "of natural selection, but there are many reasons why natural selection does not reach an isolated behavior or trait. "Any action is not merely negative, or just positive, depending on the environment in which you are in." "he said.
For example, love stimulation, willing to take risks, in order to obtain new and exciting experience, is often considered negative, excessive seek to stimulate the sense of substance abuse, crime and physical harm and other behaviors. But there are potentially positive results, Holmes says, and these people usually have more social support, more outward and more exercise.
So is anxiety. Holmes said: "In social situations, you may be more restrained and may find it more difficult to build friendships." "However, the same anxiety, if you are in a working environment, is the motivation for you to prepare for a big speech." If you are at school, the same anxiety will motivate you to study for the exams.
The researchers also point out that people have more control over their environment, which means it is possible to survive in an environment conducive to the functioning of the brain. However, if any of the characteristics of the mutation is normal, it will cause people to question the disorderly behavior.
These also complicate the search for biomarkers of mental illness. "What we want to do is build a multivariable approach, taking into account many areas of human behavior, to see if we can improve the ability to predict results." "Holmes said. (Source: Science nets tang one dust)