The research of , assistant professor and Robert R. Capranica Fellow in the Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, is explored in this recent story.
The story says that Goldberg鈥檚 research seeks to answer, 鈥渨hat does how baby songbirds learn to sing have to do with human diseases, affecting how people control variability in their thoughts or actions?鈥
"Goldberg first had the idea to turn song birds into a model system for medical research after reading about a breakthrough in brain research conducted at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,鈥 the story says.
Goldberg was interested in diseases that can affect how people control variability in their thoughts or actions such as Schizophrenia, Huntington鈥檚 disease, and dystonia.
鈥淏ut rather than thinking of these diseases as causing a deficit,鈥 Goldberg says in the story, 鈥渕aybe what鈥檚 going on is that there鈥檚 a variability generator that can either be cranked up and not controlled, or underactive.鈥
鈥淚f we can identify the sources of variability in movement, they are likely to have the same origins in the brain as the ones that control cognition,鈥 Goldberg says in the story. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 no such thing as a psychiatric disease or a neurological disease. There鈥檚 no differentiation. They鈥檙e all neuropsychiatric.鈥
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