
Dr James Kesby

Advanced Researcher
Developmental Neurobiology Research Stream
Lecturer
School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Queensland
Completed PhD Student (Awarded 2010)
Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research
Email:
Biography
Dr James Kesby's research interest lies in cognitive and decision-making problems associated with psychotic disorders like schizophrenia. These problems are a significant burden for these individuals and predict poor functional outcomes, such as maintaining work, social networks, and independent living. Dr Kesby is particularly interested in the relationship between decision-making problems and psychotic symptoms in these disorders; and creating new knowledge to understand if improving decision-making also reduce psychotic symptoms. To that end, James focuses on decision-making tasks that are reliant on brain areas and networks that are implicated in psychosis, and his work aims to understand how corticostriatal circuitry drives decision-making processes, and how this is altered in those with schizophrenia and psychosis.
Dr Kesby has taken advantage of collaborations with basic scientists and clinical researchers with a broad range of expertise to establish a cross-species program of research focussed on decision-making. His research is guided by two fundamental questions:
- Do decision-making problems in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders contribute to psychotic symptoms?
- How can we leverage the mechanistic tools available in rodent neuroscience to identify causative common substrates underlying decision-making problems (and by proxy psychotic symptoms)?
PhD title
The effect of developmental vitamin D depletion on the dopaminergic system and behaviour in the rats
Supervisors
Prof Darryl Eyles and A/Prof Thomas Burne