improved, and he decided to enroll in a local community college, where he
studied graphic design. It was early in his recovery, and the plan was too
ambitious. After a few months he dropped out.
Over time, the medication progressively improved his symptoms, but it
was a challenge for his parents to persuade him to take it on a regular basis.
He continued to doubt that he had a psychiatric illness. His doctor switched
William to a new drug that didn’t require him to take pills every day. He
just needed to come in once a month for an injection, allowing him to experi-
ence uninterrupted treatment. On this formulation he improved to the point
where he was able to work full time as a cook and live independently in his
own apartment.
Schizophrenia
1
is a form of psychosis notable for the presence of hallu-
cinations and delusions. Hallucinations can cause a person to see things
that aren’t really there, feel their touch, even smell them. The most
common type of hallucination is the auditory hallucination—hearing
voices. The voices may comment on the person’s behavior (“You’re eat-
ing lunch now.”). There may be more than one voice holding a conver-
sation about the person (“Have you noticed that everybody hates him?”
“It’s because he doesn’t shower.”). Sometimes they’re command hal-
lucinations (“Kill yourself!”). Occasionally, the voices are friendly and
encouraging (“You’re a great guy. Keep up the good work.”) Friendly
hallucinations are the least likely to go away, which may be just as well.
Overall, they have a positive influence.
1 “Madness” is not a psychiatric diagnosis. We use it here as it’s used in conversa-
tion, meaning severe mental illness, including delusions and chaotic or disordered
thoughts. The diagnosis most commonly referred to by the informal term
madness
is schizophrenia.
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THE MOLECULE OF MORE
Another component of psychosis is delusions. These are fixed
beliefs that are inconsistent with the generally accepted view of reality,
such as “Aliens have implanted a computer chip in my brain.” Delu-
sions are held with absolute certainty, a level of certainty that is rarely
experienced with nondelusional ideas. For example, most people are
confident that their parents really are their parents, but if you ask them
if they are absolutely certain, they will confess that they are not. On the
other hand, when a schizophrenic patient was asked if he was sure that
the FBI was using radio waves to implant messages in his head, he said
there could be no doubt. No amount of evidence could convince him
otherwise.
A good example of this phenomenon comes from John Nash, a
Nobel Prize–winning mathematician, who lived with schizophre-
nia. Silvia Nasar, who wrote about Nash in her book A Beautiful Mind,
recounted the following exchange between Nash and Harvard profes-
sor George Mackey:
“How could you,” began Mackey, “how could you, a
mathematician, a man devoted to reason and logical proof . . .
how could you believe that extraterrestrials are sending you
messages? How could you believe that you are being recruited
by aliens from outer space to save the world? How could
you . . . ?”
Nash looked up at last and fixed Mackey with an
unblinking stare as cool and dispassionate as that of any bird
or snake. “Because,” Nash said slowly in his soft, reasonable
southern drawl, as if talking to himself, “the ideas I had
about supernatural beings came to me the same way that my
mathematical ideas did.”
Where, in fact, do these ideas come from? One clue comes from what
we know about how to treat schizophrenia. Psychiatrists prescribe
medications called antipsychotics that reduce activity within the dopa-
mine desire circuit. At first glance, that seems odd. Stimulation of the
desire circuit typically leads to excitement, wanting, enthusiasm, and
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CREATIVITY AND MADNESS
motivation. How could excess stimulation cause psychosis? The answer
comes from the concept of salience, a phenomenon that will also play a
crucial role in understanding the roots of creativity.
SALIENCE AND THE DOPAMINE CONNECTION
Salience refers to the degree to which things are important, prom-
inent, or conspicuous. One kind of salience is the quality of being
unusual. For example, a clown walking down the street would be more
salient—more out of place—than a man in a business suit. Another
kind of salience is value. A briefcase with $10,000 in it is more salient
than a wallet with $20. Different things are salient to different people.
A jar of peanut butter is more salient to a boy with a peanut allergy
than to one who is allergy free. It would also be more salient to a girl
who loves peanut butter sandwiches compared to one who prefers
tuna salad.
Think about how salient the following things are: a grocery store
you’ve seen a hundred times before versus a grocery store that just
opened yesterday, the face of a stranger versus the face of the person
you secretly love, and a policeman as you are walking down the street
versus a policeman after you just made an illegal left turn. Things
are salient when they are important to you, if they have the potential
to impact your well-being, for good or for evil. Things are salient
if they have the potential to affect your future. Things are salient if
they trigger desire dopamine. They broadcast the message, Wake up.
Pay attention. Get excited. This is important. You’re sitting at a bus stop,
glancing at a newspaper article about a Canadian trade agreement.
Unless the mind-numbing details of the negotiation will impact you
in some way, your desire dopamine circuit is at rest. Then all of a
sudden you come across the name of one of your classmates from
high school. She’s been involved in the negotiation of the pact. Bang!
Salience. Dopamine. As you read further, your interest rising, you sud-
denly come across your own name. You can imagine how that would
affect your dopamine.
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THE MOLECULE OF MORE
A PSYCHOTIC SHORT CIRCUIT
What happens, though, if the salience function of the brain
malfunctions—if it goes off even when there is nothing happening that
is actually important to you? Imagine you’re watching the news. The
anchorman is talking about a government spying program, and sud-
denly your salience circuit fires for no reason at all. You might then
believe that this story on the news has something to do with you. Too
much salience, or any salience at all at the wrong time, can create delu-
sions. The triggering event rises from obscurity to importance.
A common delusion among people with schizophrenia is that peo-
ple on TV are talking directly to them. Another is that they are the
target of investigation by the NSA, FBI, KGB, or Secret Service. One
patient said he saw a stop sign, and thought it was a message from his
mother telling him to stop looking at women. Another patient saw a
red car parked outside her apartment on Valentine’s Day, and believed
it was a message of love from her psychiatrist. Even people who have
never been psychotic might learn to attach salience to things that appear
unimportant to others, such as black cats or the number 13.
2
There’s wide variation in how much salience different people attach
to different things. Everyone has a lower limit, though. We have to cat-
egorize some things as having low salience, being unimportant, so we
can ignore them for the simple reason that noticing every detail in the
world around us would be overwhelming.
BLOCKING DOPAMINE TO
TREAT PSYCHOSIS
People with schizophrenia control their dopamine activity by
taking medications that block dopamine receptors (Figure 4).
2 Is superstition a very mild form of delusion, or is it a choice? Research indicates
that superstitious people have a preponderance of dopaminergic traits, so there is
probably a genetic tendency for some people to adopt superstitious beliefs.
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CREATIVITY AND MADNESS
Receptors are molecules that sit on the outside of brain cells
and catch neurotransmitter molecules (such as dopamine,
serotonin, and endorphins). Brain cells have different recep-
tors for different neurotransmitters, and each one affects the
cell in a different way. Some receptors stimulate brain cells
and others lull them into a state of tranquility. Changing cell
behavior is how the brain processes information. It’s similar
to transistors turning on and off in a computer chip.
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