• Bipolar disorder (previously known as manic depression) is a diagnostic category describing a class of mood disorders where the person experiences states or episodes of depression and/or mania, hypomania, and/or mixed states. (t-vox.org)
  • The difference between bipolar disorder and unipolar disorder (also called major depression), for the purpose of this introduction, is that bipolar disorder involves "energized" or "activated" mood states in addition to depressed mood states. (t-vox.org)
  • Beyond impairment caused by mood swings, bipolar disorder has profound effects on energy levels, sleep patterns, activity levels and thinking abilities. (t-vox.org)
  • For most individuals with bipolar disorder, the condition is disabling and the untreated individual has great difficulty functioning. (t-vox.org)
  • The causes of bipolar disorder are both biological and psychological. (t-vox.org)
  • Husseini K. Manji M.D. of the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) states that at their most basic level, the bipolar disorders involve problems in brain structure and function. (t-vox.org)
  • Bipolar disorders are polygenic (involving many genes), so typical symptoms differ significantly from person to person, even among twins with the disorder. (t-vox.org)
  • It is becoming increasingly clear that bipolar and unipolar mood disorders are biologically related illnesses, because individuals with both mood disorders tend to share a strong family history of bipolar spectrum disorders. (t-vox.org)
  • Anxiety disorders, bipolar disorder, clinical depression, eating disorders, premenstrual dysphoric disorder, postpartum depression, postpartum psychosis and/or schizophrenia are usually part of the patient's family history. (t-vox.org)
  • Robert Post M.D. of the U.S. NIMH proposed the "kindling" theory [2] which asserts that people who are genetically predisposed toward bipolar disorder experience a series of stressful events, each of which lowers the threshold at which mood changes occur. (t-vox.org)
  • As with nearly all psychiatric or psychological phenomena, the etiology of bipolar disorder is thought to include a complex interplay between genetic vulnerability and environmental events (stressful life events, major achievements, difficult relationships with family and/or significant others, drug use and other physical and social phenomena). (t-vox.org)
  • Moreover, since the presence of bipolar disorder among identical twins (who share 100% of their DNA) is about 50% to 80% (depending on how well the disorder is defined), some environmental factors must be at play. (t-vox.org)
  • Similarly, evidence is beginning to emerge that cognitive impairment may also be a core feature of bipolar disorder. (psychiatrist.com)
  • In addition, cognitive deficits adversely affect functional outcomes in bipolar disorder. (psychiatrist.com)
  • This evidence suggests that cognition can be considered a reasonable target for intervention in both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. (psychiatrist.com)
  • Over the past few decades, neuroimaging research in Bipolar Disorder (BD) has identified neural differences underlying cognitive and emotional processing. (nature.com)
  • Alterations in cognitive control are shared common features of different psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and bipolar disorder. (iit.it)
  • Twin studies have lacked statistical power to apply advanced genetic modelling techniques to the search for cognitive endophenotypes for bipolar disorder. (cambridge.org)
  • To quantify the shared genetic variability between bipolar disorder and cognitive measures. (cambridge.org)
  • Structural equation modelling was performed on cognitive data collected from 331 twins/siblings of varying genetic relatedness, disease status and concordance for bipolar disorder. (cambridge.org)
  • Neurocognitive deficits are a core feature of both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. (edu.au)
  • What is the evidence for cognition in bipolar disorder compared to schizophrenia? (edu.au)
  • Moderate to high quality evidence found large effects of better overall cognition , attention , and social cognition , and medium-sized effects of better speed of processing , working memory , learning , reasoning , and problem solving in people with bipolar disorder. (edu.au)
  • A small effect was found of better overall cognition in people with bipolar disorder compared to people with schizoaffective disorder (particularly depressive type), which remained across different cognitive domains, bipolar disorder type (I or I and II mixed) , age, sex, duration of illness, antipsychotic use or no use, and symptom severity. (edu.au)
  • Moderate to high quality evidence found a medium-sized effect of higher premorbid IQ, and moderate to low quality evidence found a medium-sized effect of higher current IQ in people with first-episode bipolar disorder compared to people with first-episode schizophrenia . (edu.au)
  • There were also medium-sized effects of better verbal memory and verbal fluency, and small effects of better working memory and processing speed in people with first-episode bipolar disorder. (edu.au)
  • Compared to controls without a mental illness, moderate to high quality evidence found a small effect of poorer pre-illness-onset cognitive functioning, and a medium-sized effect of poorer post-illness-onset cognitive functioning in people with bipolar disorder. (edu.au)
  • Moderate quality evidence found similar, medium to large effects of poor semantic inhibition in people with bipolar disorder and in people with schizophrenia when compared to controls. (edu.au)
  • A medium-sized effect was found of better social cognition in people with bipolar disorder on Theory of Mind and negative facial emotion recognition tasks, particularly in male patients, but no differences between bipolar disorder and schizophrenia on positive (happy) facial emotion recognition tasks. (edu.au)
  • Individuals in our dual diagnosis residential treatment program have a primary psychiatric diagnosis, such as major depression , bipolar illness , schizophrenia , or an anxiety disorder , with a co-occurring substance use disorder. (skylandtrail.org)
  • Bipolar disorder, depression and psychosis commonly emerge during adolescence and continue in young adulthood-potentially related to anomalies in the way adolescents mature caused by psychosocial, biological or environmental factors. (facmedicine.com)
  • BACKGROUND: Antidepressants are used to treat acute depression in patients with bipolar I disorder, but their effect as maintenance treatment after the remission of depression has not been well studied. (bvsalud.org)
  • METHODS: We conducted a multisite, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of maintenance of treatment with adjunctive escitalopram or bupropion XL as compared with discontinuation of antidepressant therapy in patients with bipolar I disorder who had recently had remission of a depressive episode. (bvsalud.org)
  • RESULTS: Of 209 patients with bipolar I disorder who participated in an open-label treatment phase, 150 who had remission of depression were enrolled in the double-blind phase in addition to 27 patients who were enrolled directly. (bvsalud.org)
  • CONCLUSIONS: In a trial involving patients with bipolar I disorder and a recently remitted depressive episode, adjunctive treatment with escitalopram or bupropion XL that continued for 52 weeks did not show a significant benefit as compared with treatment for 8 weeks in preventing relapse of any mood episode. (bvsalud.org)
  • Bipolar disorder's core feature is the pathological disturbances in mood, often accompanied by disrupted thinking and behavior. (bvsalud.org)
  • Bipolar disorder or frank dementia - May appear late in the disease course but is sometimes found at the time of initial diagnosis. (medscape.com)
  • Medicines such as donepezil and rivastigmine can temporarily improve cognition and overall functioning, and melatonin can be used for sleep-related symptoms. (wikipedia.org)
  • Dopaminergic neurotransmission in the prefrontal cortex is important for the regulation of cognitive function and therapeutic interventions that modulate dopaminergic function in the cortex could improve cognition. (jhu.edu)
  • In the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), dementia, which formed a category called "Delirium, dementia, amnestic, and other cognitive disorders" in DSM-IV, falls under the new category of "major neurocognitive disorders" (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). (camh.ca)
  • The objectives of this program are to accelerate innovative drug discovery, the development of pharmacologic tools for basic and clinical research on mental disorders, or drug or alcohol addiction, and the development and validation of models for evaluating novel therapeutics for mental disorders. (nih.gov)
  • The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) invite applications to advance the discovery, preclinical development, and testing of new, rationally based candidate medications to treat mental disorders, drug or alcohol addiction, and the development of novel ligands as tools to further characterize existing or to validate new drug targets. (nih.gov)
  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) pertains to a class of interventions whose premise is that mental disorders and psychological distress are maintained by cognitive factors. (ipl.org)
  • Cognitive deficits are core features of mental disorders and important in predicting long-term prognosis-the researchers' work indicates that individual patterns of such deficits predate specific mental disorders. (facmedicine.com)
  • Mental disorders cause a significant disease burden globally and at least 10% of children andadolescents worldwide have a mental disorder. (facmedicine.com)
  • 75% of mental disorders diagnosed in adults have their onset in childhood and adolescence. (facmedicine.com)
  • It's crucial to study the onset of mental disorders at these early stages and evaluate which risk factors predate these conditions and in what way. (facmedicine.com)
  • These factors are core features of mental disorders such as psychosis and mood disorders,' commented co-author Professor Matthew Broome. (facmedicine.com)
  • Individuals with late-adolescent/early adult onset of the disorder will very likely have experienced childhood anxiety and depression. (t-vox.org)
  • While this is an important initial observation, we don't yet have any understanding of how persistent this effect on cognition is, or how this observed change may be related to any benefit ketamine may have on depression or suicide risk," Murrough said. (medscape.com)
  • depression, anxiety, somatic disorders. (ipl.org)
  • Pilates also utilizes breath control -another effective way to not only reduce stressful feelings in the moment, but balance out the body's autonomic nervous system and ease long-term symptoms of stress-related disorders, like anxiety and depression. (yahoo.com)
  • Targeting specific markers in childhood for early treatment may help to minimise the risk of children developing certain psychopathological problems in adolescence and adult life, such as borderline personality disorder, depression and psychosis. (facmedicine.com)
  • Overview of Delirium and Dementia Delirium (sometimes called acute confusional state) and dementia are the most common causes of cognitive impairment, although affective disorders (eg, depression) can also disrupt cognition. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a type of dementia characterized by changes in sleep, behavior, cognition, movement, and regulation of automatic bodily functions. (wikipedia.org)
  • DLB is dementia that occurs with "some combination of fluctuating cognition, recurrent visual hallucinations, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD), and parkinsonism", according to Armstrong (2019), when Parkinson's disease is not well established before the dementia occurs. (wikipedia.org)
  • The diagnosis of dementia is based on a decline in cognition from a previous level of ability, observed both subjectively and objectively on cognitive testing, and is classified by the presumed underlying cause (see Differentiating types of dementia below). (camh.ca)
  • Dementia is a term that covers several diseases that affect memory, cognition and daily activities, including Alzheimer's disease. (who.int)
  • Her research focuses on the causes and treatment of dementia and other neurodegenerative disorders. (ucsd.edu)
  • Dementia Dementia is chronic, global, usually irreversible deterioration of cognition. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Because Lewy bodies occur in dementia with Lewy bodies and in Parkinson disease dementia, some experts think that the two disorders may be part of a more generalized synucleinopathy affecting the central and peripheral nervous systems. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Social cognition impairment is a core shared phenotype in both schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD) and autism spectrum disorders (ASD). (cra-rhone-alpes.org)
  • Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are lifelong disorders of development. (cochrane.org)
  • Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are characterized by impairment in social interaction, impairment in communication and lack of flexibility of thought and behavior. (cochrane.org)
  • Travers's research program - the Motor Lab - housed at the Waisman Center on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus, combines neuroimaging measures with quantitative measures of motor function, cognition, and daily living skills in individuals with autism spectrum disorders. (wisc.edu)
  • Is Emotion Recognition Impaired in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders? (ubc-emotionlab.ca)
  • Several primary neurodegenerative disorders distinct from Parkinson's disease (PD) share parkinsonian features of bradykinesia, rigidity, tremor, and balance disturbances. (medscape.com)
  • Doug Galasko, MD Associate Director of the Shiley-Marcos ADRC Clinical Core is a neurologist who conducts clinical and basic research on Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other neurodegenerative disorders. (ucsd.edu)
  • Establishing differences in these cognitive domains may assist correct diagnosis and treatment of the two disorders. (edu.au)
  • Our most intensive level of care for adult clients with a primary mood, thought or anxiety disorder and co-occurring alcohol or substance use is our dual diagnosis program. (skylandtrail.org)
  • As a treatment center for dual diagnosis, Skyland Trail integrates multiple evidence-based therapeutic approaches to address the symptoms and challenges of both a mood, thought, or anxiety disorder and a substance use problem. (skylandtrail.org)
  • The dual diagnosis program at Skyland Trail is designed to treat clients with a primary mood, thought, or anxiety disorder who have a co-occurring substance use issue. (skylandtrail.org)
  • Clients with co-occurring substance use disorders also are assigned to a second dual diagnosis recovery community. (skylandtrail.org)
  • The mediation effect of disordered eating cognition on the relationship between online media exposure or weight and fitness management app use on disordered eating behaviors was investigated with two moderated mediation models. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Online media exposure and weight and fitness management app use showed a significant correlation with disordered eating behaviors in males and females. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Disordered eating cognition mediated the relationship between online media exposure or weight and fitness management app use and disordered eating behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Many studies reported that the peer pressure and the ideal body conveyed by online media, as well as calculating calories with weight and fitness management apps, may induce disordered eating behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Our results suggested that in young adults in the mainland of China, spending more time on online media and using weight and fitness management apps were closely correlated to disordered eating cognition and behaviors. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Exposure to online media or using weight and fitness management apps induce disordered eating behaviors through evoking disordered eating cognition. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Qualitative feedback further supported high levels of perceived acceptability and satisfaction and positive treatment outcomes across a range of domains, including behaviors, cognitions, emotions, and social functioning. (jmir.org)
  • Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and moral injury can encounter several barriers to treatment, including limited access to care and low engagement with therapy. (jmir.org)
  • REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD)-in which people lose the muscle paralysis (atonia) that normally occurs during REM sleep and act out their dreams-is a core feature. (wikipedia.org)
  • Suggestive symptoms are rapid eye movement (REM)-sleep behavior disorder and abnormalities detected in PET or SPECT scans. (abovetopsecret.com)
  • Dialectical behavior therapy for personality disorders. (utah.edu)
  • Cognitive impairment is considered a core feature of schizophrenia that includes problems in speed of processing, attention/vigilance, working memory, verbal learning, visual learning, reasoning and problem solving, and social cognition. (psychiatrist.com)
  • The second core feature is impairment that interferes with the patient's independence in everyday functioning. (camh.ca)
  • Cognitive impairment is a core feature of many psychiatric and neurological disorders. (jhu.edu)
  • The diverse range of training packages address Alzheimer's disease, autism spectrum disorder, blindness and vision impairment, deafness and hearing loss, and cerebrospinal injuries. (who.int)
  • This project focused on the development and feasibility testing of the 'Edinburgh Psychoeduation Intervention for Children (EPIC)', where she worked with children with ADHD and their teachers to develop a toolbox-based intervention aimed to support cognition and learning in the classroom. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • The mediation analysis suggested the importance of prevention and intervention of disordered eating cognition. (biomedcentral.com)
  • language disorders, intervention, and cognitive training. (gcs.gov.mo)
  • Dr. Blumenfeld's clinical and research work focuses on epilepsy, cognition and brain imaging. (yale.edu)
  • He directs Yale's Clinical Neuroscience Imaging Center (CNIC), a new multi-disciplinary core facility for innovative study and treatment of brain disorders. (yale.edu)
  • These disorders have complex clinical presentations that reflect degeneration in various neuronal systems. (medscape.com)
  • We found that both clinical groups perform similarly to each other and worse than healthy controls in all social cognition tasks. (cra-rhone-alpes.org)
  • Clinical psychology specializes in the classification, assessment and treatment of behavioral and emotional disorders. (niu.edu)
  • For example, memory is related to questions and issues relevant to clinical psychologists (the development of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), developmental psychology (how does memory change as we grow older), social psychology (how stereotypes are stored in memory) and neuroscience (how memory is encoded in the brain). (niu.edu)
  • At this moment, the key project objective is to finalise development of the web-based platform including a virtual biobank to integrate the core clinical dataset from patients from all participating centres with biomarker data obtained from different biosamples. (neurodegenerationresearch.eu)
  • The core clinical dataset has been defined and the required fields for data collection of neuropathology biomarkers, wet biomarkers (in CSF, blood) and imaging biomarkers (MRI, MUNIX) are being set up. (neurodegenerationresearch.eu)
  • Recently it became clear that the Edinburgh Cognitive and Behavioural ALS Screen (ECAS) would be an excellent addition to the core clinical dataset that is collected from ALS patients: Collecting longitudinal reliable neuropsychology data would be useful to detect the specific profile of cognition and behaviour changes in ALS and to differentiate it from other disorders. (neurodegenerationresearch.eu)
  • Other core features are visual hallucinations, marked fluctuations in attention or alertness, and parkinsonism (slowness of movement, trouble walking, or rigidity). (wikipedia.org)
  • While the specific symptoms in a person with DLB will vary, core features of DLB are: fluctuating cognition with great variations in attention and alertness from day to day and hour to hour, recurrent visual hallucinations (observed in 75% of people with DLB), and motor features of Parkinson's. (abovetopsecret.com)
  • Cognition is considered a reasonable treatment target in individuals with schizophrenia, partly because cognitive deficits contribute to poor functional outcomes. (psychiatrist.com)
  • Notably, cognitive deficits in these disorders are currently considered the main source of disability, having the most critical impact on the daily life of the patients and their relatives, on public health and long-term outcomes. (iit.it)
  • Deficits in cognitive function, ranging from decreased attention and working memory to disrupted social cognition and language, are common in psychiatric disorders. (facmedicine.com)
  • We investigated neural mechanisms of decision making in OCD patients, including early and late onset of disorder, in terms of reward prediction errors (RPEs) using functional magnetic resonance imaging. (cambridge.org)
  • We conducted a retrospective chart review to examine the gender differences in young onset Persistent Delusional Disorder (PDD) subjects (N = 236) with onset of illness before the age of 30 years. (bvsalud.org)
  • Here, we created a robust protocol that can be used later on for disease modeling of developmental or more early-onset brain disorders," explains Andreas Bruzelius. (lu.se)
  • Two studies compared acupressure plus conventional treatment with conventional treatment alone and found no difference in core autistic features, although acupressure seemed to improve some aspects of the secondary outcomes. (cochrane.org)
  • Overall, acupuncture did not seem to be effective in improving core features of ASD but it might have improved certain developmental and functioning outcomes, at least in the short term. (cochrane.org)
  • I am broadly interested in cognition and educational outcomes in typical and atypical development. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • Exploring treatment outcomes for children and adolescents with eating disorders: what works for whom and why? (kcl.ac.uk)
  • The p factor: one general psychopathology factor in the structure of psychiatric disorders? (crossref.org)
  • Andreas' research focuses on generating brain cells, specifically interneurons, in the lab, which has significant implications for the study of neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders. (lu.se)
  • Several neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders including autism, schizophrenia, and epilepsy, may be caused by damage to interneurons. (lu.se)
  • The relationship between online media exposure and disordered eating symptoms has been reported in western regions. (biomedcentral.com)
  • This study aims to evaluate the association between online media exposure or weight and fitness management app use and disordered eating symptoms in Chinese mainland young adults, and the mediation effect of disordered eating cognition. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Through correlation analysis, the relationship between online media exposure or weight and fitness management app use and disordered eating symptoms was examined, separately by sex. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Young female adults in the Chinese mainland presented higher disordered eating symptoms and were more engaged in online media and weight and fitness management app use than males. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Online media exposure and weight and fitness management app use play a crucial role in the generation of disordered eating symptoms in Chinese mainland young adults, especially in females. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Maria's life history and her psychological assessment enabled us to understand the development of her symptoms and to identify the predisposing, precipitating and maintaining aspects of the obsessive-compulsive disorder [OCD]. (bvsalud.org)
  • In addition to dizziness, core body temperature may increase, which may lead to other symptoms (see list below) (NIOSH, 2016). (cdc.gov)
  • Evidence of this decline must come from two sources: concern expressed by the patient or another reliable source about cognition, and impaired performance on cognitive tests. (camh.ca)
  • Evidence suggests that cognitive and literacy difficulties are common for children with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). (surrey.ac.uk)
  • Though the prevalence of eating disorders and access to the Internet increased substantially in recent years, relevant evidence is rare in mainland China. (biomedcentral.com)
  • 3320 LANGUAGE DISORDERS IN CHILDREN A study of theories and practices pertaining to developmental, organic, and psychological language disturbances in children, including an overview of other disciplines involved in childhood language disorders. (uca.edu)
  • ABSTRACT: Two hypnotic interventions based on cognitive-behavioral theories of hypnosis and behavioral treatments of other disorders were used to treat a woman with multiple personalities. (behavior.net)
  • The variation of cognitive impairments in individuals with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) presents a challenge for developing unifying theories of the core weakness. (readingrockets.org)
  • Download the Theories of Cognition Table (opens in a new window) . (readingrockets.org)
  • We will discuss these and other core questions related to the concepts, theories and methods of psychology. (humansofuniversity.com)
  • 2300 INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION SCIENCES AND DISORDERS Required introductory study of communication, its disorders, and the professions of speech-language pathology and audiology. (uca.edu)
  • Morè L, Lauterborn JC, Papaleo F* , Brambilla R. Enhancing cognition through pharmacological and environmental interventions: examples from preclinical models of neurodevelopmental disorders. (iit.it)
  • Students will apply critical concepts in neuroscience to understanding normal and disordered processes of sensation, movement, cognition, language, and communication across the lifespan. (usu.edu)
  • Since emotion and cognition are inseparable processes in the brain it follows that what is true of emotion is also true of cognition. (frontiersin.org)
  • A strong core helps the body successfully enact many of its automated processes, including maintaining our balance. (yahoo.com)
  • The results showed that rats consuming the berry diets exhibited enhanced motor performance and improved cognition, specifically working memory. (cambridge.org)
  • Detailed information on this handbook can be found on the Cambridge University Press webpage: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-handbook-of-working-memory-and-language/B9DC19AD1E505F54F497752C77E6560B. (gcs.gov.mo)
  • DSM-5 outlines two core features of major neurocognitive disorder. (camh.ca)
  • Dejerine and Thomas first used the term olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) in 1900 when they described 2 patients with a degenerative disorder leading to progressive cerebellar dysfunction and parkinsonism. (medscape.com)
  • Parkinson Disease Parkinson disease is a slowly progressive, degenerative disorder characterized by resting tremor, stiffness (rigidity), slow and decreased movement (bradykinesia), and eventually gait and/or. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has been linked to functional abnormalities in fronto-striatal networks as well as impairments in decision making and learning. (cambridge.org)
  • Using resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (Rs-fMRI), a noninvasive technique that allows for studies on brain connectivity, researchers discovered that low-intensity exercise triggers brain networks involved in cognition control and attention processing, while high-intensity exercise primarily activates networks involved in affective/emotion processing. (sciencedaily.com)
  • 353 Chinese mainland female and 142 male young adults completed online questionnaires consisting of demographic information, Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire 6.0 (EDE-Q 6.0), and items relating to online media exposure and weight and fitness management app use. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Given that fact that heat exposure may affect cognition, it is important to limit heat strain on workers who may have a greater chance of inadvertent self-contamination during the PPE doffing procedure. (cdc.gov)
  • 4230 FLUENCY AND FLUENCY DISORDERS A study of the development of fluent speech and the assessment and treatment of fluency disorders such as stuttering and cluttering. (uca.edu)
  • Complexity and transactions: Author rejoinder to commentaries on assessment of mechanisms in personality disorders. (utah.edu)
  • Assessment of mechanisms in personality disorders. (utah.edu)
  • With this client it sounds as though you are dealing with Dissociative Identity Disorder (formerly known as Multiple Personality) rather than simple dissociation. (behavior.net)
  • Fine, C. G. (1994) Cognitive hypnotherapeutic interventions in the treatment of multiple personality disorder. (behavior.net)
  • ABSTRACT: Discusses cognitive and cognitive hypnotherapy (CHT) considerations that aid the patient with multiple personality disorder (MPD) to achieve unification of all personalities. (behavior.net)
  • Fine, C. G. (1991) Treatment stabilization and crisis prevention: Pacing the therapy of the multiple personality disorder patient. (behavior.net)
  • ABSTRACT: Reviews the tactical integrationist's perspective in work with multiple personality disorder (MPD) patients. (behavior.net)
  • Ross, C. A. & Gahan, P. (1988) Cognitive analysis of multiple personality disorder. (behavior.net)
  • ABSTRACT: Defines the basic cognitive map of multiple personality disorder (MPD), including 8 core assumptions that recur in the majority of cases. (behavior.net)
  • In Feinstein, R. Personality Disorders: Multi-Theoretical View Points, Primer on Series. (utah.edu)
  • In Lejuez, C. W., & Gratz, K. Cambridge Handbook of Personality Disorders (pp. 396-398). (utah.edu)
  • Murrough said one caveat to the study is that it only examined the effect of ketamine on cognition once, 1 day after a single treatment. (medscape.com)
  • Dr. Brewer applies neuroimaging to the study of human memory function and dysfunction and directs the Imaging Core for the multi-institutional Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study. (ucsd.edu)
  • Liberal Core Science Component in Psychology (45 credits) provides students with a broad overview of the field of psychological science. (mcgill.ca)
  • A total of 78 adults with major depressive disorder and clinically significant suicidal ideation underwent neuropsychological testing before, and 1 day after, double-blind treatment with a single intravenous infusion of ketamine or midazolam . (medscape.com)
  • and PAR-07-048 and PAR-07-049 , to stimulate the discovery, design, development and testing of novel compounds aimed at prevention or treatment of nervous system disorders. (nih.gov)
  • In the future, professional guidance of the content on online media and weight and fitness management apps is crucial for the prevention of eating disorders in young adults. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Along with the rise of the Internet and smartphones, the promotion and development of online media, or new media have entered an unprecedented speed, which seems to have led to a further expansion of the media's influence on eating disorders. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) are more at risk for academic underachievement compared to their typically developing peers. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • Pastor PN, Reuben CA. Diagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning disability: United States, 2004-2006. (cdc.gov)
  • Diagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and learning disability, United States, 2004-2006 : data from the National Health Interview Survey. (cdc.gov)
  • 1. Attention-deficit-disordered children--United States. (cdc.gov)
  • The Edinburgh Neuroscience community comprises more than 120 world-leading Neuroscience groups covering interests spanning different levels of analysis from genes to cognition, across the life course, in health and disease. (ed.ac.uk)
  • Overview of normal development as well as various communication disorders occurring with speech and language. (uca.edu)
  • The publication of this Cambridge Handbook provides an important reference for researchers, clinicians, speech therapists, and advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students in a wide range of fields including linguistics, psychology, education, speech therapy, cognitive science and neuroscience, helping us to gain a deep understanding of the intricate connection between language, cognition and the mind at multiple levels. (gcs.gov.mo)
  • It is not appropriate for individuals with a primary substance use disorder. (skylandtrail.org)
  • The Alzheimer's disease and autism spectrum disorder training packages are designed to empower individuals and caregivers with vital knowledge and skills. (who.int)
  • These packages cover crucial topics such as the core concepts of Alzheimer's disease and autism and strategies to effectively support individuals affected by these conditions. (who.int)
  • Beck (1970) and Ellis (1962), were the pioneers Cognitive Behavioral Therapy approach of the core premise of holds that maladaptive cognitions contribute to the maintenance of emotional distress and behavioral problems. (ipl.org)
  • The current systematic review and meta-analysis investigated the relationship between cognition and literacy in children with ADHD. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • Where two or more studies used comparable measures of cognition and literacy, a meta-analysis of the relationship between these measures was undertaken. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • This systematic review demonstrates differential relationships between aspects of literacy and cognition in children with ADHD. (surrey.ac.uk)
  • Her work is inherently interdisciplinary, as Travers is a trained cognitive psychologist who received interdisciplinary postdoctoral training in developmental disorders and biomedical physics. (wisc.edu)
  • However, because of the common parkinsonian features, the disorders have been collectively named Parkinson-plus syndromes. (medscape.com)
  • A second aim of our paper is to develop an account of embodied cognition based on the inseparability of cognitive and emotional processing in the brain. (frontiersin.org)