Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Neurodevelopment and Schizophrenia
View through CrossRef
This book was originally published in 2004 and concerns developmental neurobiology. In the decade preceding publication, developmental neurobiology made important strides towards elucidating the pathophysiology of psychiatric disorders. Nowhere has this link between basic science and clinical insights become clearer than in the field of schizophrenia research. Each contributor to this volume provides a fresh overview of the relevant research, including directions for further investigation. The book begins with a section on advances in developmental neurobiology. This is followed by sections on etiological and pathophysiological developments, and models that integrate this knowledge. The final section addresses the clinical insights that emerge from the developmental models. This book will be valuable to researchers in psychiatry and neurobiology, students in psychology, and all mental health practitioners.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Neurodevelopment and Schizophrenia
Description:
This book was originally published in 2004 and concerns developmental neurobiology.
In the decade preceding publication, developmental neurobiology made important strides towards elucidating the pathophysiology of psychiatric disorders.
Nowhere has this link between basic science and clinical insights become clearer than in the field of schizophrenia research.
Each contributor to this volume provides a fresh overview of the relevant research, including directions for further investigation.
The book begins with a section on advances in developmental neurobiology.
This is followed by sections on etiological and pathophysiological developments, and models that integrate this knowledge.
The final section addresses the clinical insights that emerge from the developmental models.
This book will be valuable to researchers in psychiatry and neurobiology, students in psychology, and all mental health practitioners.
Related Results
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is one of the most misunderstood and stigmatized mental illnesses. Discover the truth about this condition, which affects roughly 25 million people worldwide.
...
Emerging Adulthood Brain Development
Emerging Adulthood Brain Development
Emerging adulthood (EA) is marked by a prolonged developmental transition to adulthood, dynamic personal and environmental circumstances, and unique patterns of vulnerability to ps...
Late-onset schizophrenia
Late-onset schizophrenia
Although schizophrenia with onset in middle or late-life is a relatively uncommon, a considerable proportion of patients do experience the first manifestations of the disease after...
Emil Kraepelin
Emil Kraepelin
Emil Kraepelin, professor of psychiatry first in Heidelberg then Munich, originated modern psychiatric diagnosis. So it was a fateful error when, in 1899, Kraepelin made catatonia ...
Clozapine for Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia
Clozapine for Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia
This chapter provides a summary of a landmark study on the pharmacologic management of treatment-resistant schizophrenia. This clinical trial, conducted by Kane and colleagues, ask...
The ontology and epistemology of symptoms: The case of auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia
The ontology and epistemology of symptoms: The case of auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia
We present a phenomenological account of auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) in schizophrenia. We examine the mode of articulation of AVH, their spatial and temporal characteristi...
Eugen Bleuler
Eugen Bleuler
Eugen Bleuler, professor of psychiatry in Zurich, renamed Kraepelin’s dementia praecox as “schizophrenia” in 1908. He retained catatonia as a subtype. Bleuler’s dementia praecox wa...
North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study
North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study
This chapter provides a summary of a landmark study on schizophrenia. The question studied was “In patients identified clinically to be at high risk for psychosis, which variables ...

