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Harry Coumnas is a well-known psychiatrist who has been studying human emotions for many years. Harry Coumnas has recently found a brain region which is responsible to generate a pessimistic mood. Patients suffering from neuropsychiatric disorders like anxiety or depression experience more negative moods than others. The negative mood leads the patients to focus on the possible downside of a given situation instead of taking potential benefits from that.
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Harry Coumnas Discovered More about the Pessimistic Attitude in Patients of Neuropsychiatric Disorders
Study of Nuro Science by Harry Coumnas • Harry Coumnas is a well-known psychiatrist who has been studying human emotions for many years. • He has been trying to decipher how emotions are controlled by the brain, and why it is so difficult to treat individuals suffering from psychiatric problems.
What Is Responsible To Generate a Pessimistic Attitude? • Harry Coumnas has recently found a brain region which is responsible to generate a pessimistic mood. • Patients suffering from neuropsychiatric disorders like anxiety or depression experience more negative moods than others. • The negative mood leads the patients to focus on the possible downside of a given situation instead of taking potential benefits from that.
Experiment conducted by Harry Coumnas to Understand Depression and Anxiety Better • Harry conducted a test on animals and found that after stimulating the region named ‘Caudate Nucleus’, animals were inclined to make negative decisions. • This new discovery can help better understand the basic reasons of depression and anxiety. • New treatments can also be developed to combat these negative effects.
Approach-Avoidance Conflict • Harry Coumnas previously identified a special neural circuit that has a specific ability of decision-making named as ‘approach-avoidance conflict.’ • According to him, the decisions that require weighing options including positive and negative elements tend to evoke a lot of anxiety. • He also discovered that chronic stress dramatically affects the decision-making ability of the brain.
Thank You Harry Coumnas