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... • Seizures can produce sudden neurologic symptoms. • Many diseases can produce sudden neurologic symptoms. • ** Many neurologic diseases can be mistaken for epilepsy and vice-versa. ...
... • Seizures can produce sudden neurologic symptoms. • Many diseases can produce sudden neurologic symptoms. • ** Many neurologic diseases can be mistaken for epilepsy and vice-versa. ...
Chronic complex dissociative disorders and borderline personality
... vividly during an fMRI scan. Approximately 70% of patients relived their traumas showing primarily a reexperiencing/hyperarousal response with an increase in heart rate [75]; in contrast, 30% showed a secondary dissociative response with no concomitant increase in heart rate [73,74]. In comparison t ...
... vividly during an fMRI scan. Approximately 70% of patients relived their traumas showing primarily a reexperiencing/hyperarousal response with an increase in heart rate [75]; in contrast, 30% showed a secondary dissociative response with no concomitant increase in heart rate [73,74]. In comparison t ...
1 Towards a cognitive-behavioral model of PTSD in children and
... The reviews described above have demonstrated how the understanding of children and adolescents’ reactions to traumatic experiences has advanced to incorporate theory from a variety of domains. Many studies have been directed at examining core assumptions regarding the nature of PTSD in children, s ...
... The reviews described above have demonstrated how the understanding of children and adolescents’ reactions to traumatic experiences has advanced to incorporate theory from a variety of domains. Many studies have been directed at examining core assumptions regarding the nature of PTSD in children, s ...
2301WorkbookWeiten
... 2. Read the scenario and answer the questions. Sam's psychology professor, Dr. Smith, recruited him to serve as a research assistant. Sam's job was to teach study participants a new strategy for studying textbook material. Experimental group participants were supposed to be taught the new strategy, ...
... 2. Read the scenario and answer the questions. Sam's psychology professor, Dr. Smith, recruited him to serve as a research assistant. Sam's job was to teach study participants a new strategy for studying textbook material. Experimental group participants were supposed to be taught the new strategy, ...
The effects of Trauma on Attachment
... negative effects as a result of extremely stressful events. These negative effects may include relational and behaviour problems and psychological disorders such as depression, anxiety, dissociation and posttraumatic stress. Potentially traumatic events include an objective experience such as wi ...
... negative effects as a result of extremely stressful events. These negative effects may include relational and behaviour problems and psychological disorders such as depression, anxiety, dissociation and posttraumatic stress. Potentially traumatic events include an objective experience such as wi ...
Dissociative Identity Disorder: An empirical overview
... The dissociative symptoms of identity confusion, identity alteration and amnesia2 form the core symptoms differentiating DID from other disorders in the DSM-5, with only the latter two required in ICD-10 (APA, 2013; World Health Organization [WHO], 1993). While common among individuals with DID, der ...
... The dissociative symptoms of identity confusion, identity alteration and amnesia2 form the core symptoms differentiating DID from other disorders in the DSM-5, with only the latter two required in ICD-10 (APA, 2013; World Health Organization [WHO], 1993). While common among individuals with DID, der ...
8 Attachment Trauma and the Developing Right Brain
... on the formation of the implicit self system, located in the early maturing right brain (Schore, 1994, 2001a). Researchers now assert that fearful arousal and the relational modulation of that arousal lie at the heart of attachment theory, and that relational trauma triggers states of hyperarousal a ...
... on the formation of the implicit self system, located in the early maturing right brain (Schore, 1994, 2001a). Researchers now assert that fearful arousal and the relational modulation of that arousal lie at the heart of attachment theory, and that relational trauma triggers states of hyperarousal a ...