• Psychiatry · Jan 2006

    Review

    A guide to the genetics of psychiatric disease.

    • Christopher J Hough and Robert J Ursano.
    • Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814, USA. chough@usuhs.mil
    • Psychiatry. 2006 Jan 1; 69 (1): 1-20.

    AbstractThe road to scientific discovery begins with an awareness of what is unknown. Research in science can in some ways be like putting together the pieces of a puzzle without having the benefit of the box-top picture of the completed puzzle. The "picture" in science is an understanding of how nature works in a particular instance, and it takes many separate pieces of the "puzzle" to put this understanding together. These pieces are always of different kinds of data, often obtained using different approaches and techniques. The challenge of the researcher is to picture or hypothesize each of the missing pieces before actually having them in hand, so they can be sought and tested in the laboratory. This "picturing" is actually having a clear idea of what you don't know: having a clear image of the "shape" of the missing piece. This is easy when the puzzle surrounding the missing piece is already in hand, but more difficult with less of it constrained by what is already known. In putting paper puzzles together, the shape of the pieces is not the only limitation that needs to be satisfied. There is also the picture to satisfy, that is, the picture usually has to make sense. In science these constraints can be manifold, and usually the quality of the research is judged by the number of ways a piece of data integrates into and brings together the rest of the puzzle. The multidimensionality of scientific questions makes it virtually essential that as many different pieces of the puzzle as possible be obtained. The more that is not known about the puzzle, the more pieces you need. Thus it is with the genetics of psychiatric diseases. In this guide, we will explore as many of the domains of the genetic puzzle as we are aware of. We will learn a bit of the language of each and how they fit into the puzzle with at least one anecdote to serve as an example. Mapping unknown territory is always a process, but we hope this guide will increase the reader's awareness of what is unknown.

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