Search results for "PERSONALITY"

showing 10 items of 1308 documents

Differential nociceptive deficits in patients with borderline personality disorder and self-injurious behavior: laser-evoked potentials, spatial disc…

2003

Approximately 70-80% of women meeting criteria for borderline personality disorder (BPD) report attenuated pain perception or analgesia during non-suicidal, intentional self-mutilation. The aim of this study was to use laser-evoked potentials (LEPs) and psychophysical methods to differentiate the factors that may underlie this analgesic state. Ten unmedicated female patients with BPD (according to DSM-IV) and 14 healthy female control subjects were investigated using brief radiant heat pulses generated by a thulium laser and five-channel LEP recording. Heat pulses were applied as part of a spatial discrimination task (two levels of difficulty) and during a mental arithmetic task. BPD patien…

AdultPain Thresholdmedicine.medical_specialtyLaser-Evoked PotentialsStatistics as TopicAudiologyElectroencephalographyNeuropsychological Testsbehavioral disciplines and activitiesDiscrimination PsychologicalBorderline Personality DisorderThreshold of painmedicineNoxious stimulusReaction TimeHumansEvoked potentialBorderline personality disorderEvoked PotentialsPain MeasurementAnalysis of VarianceHypoalgesiamedicine.diagnostic_testSecondary somatosensory cortexLasersElectroencephalographymedicine.diseaseAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineNeurologyAnesthesiaSpace PerceptionFemaleNeurology (clinical)PsychologySelf-Injurious BehaviorPain
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Interactive effects of avoidant coping and parental hypertension on Rate Pressure Product reactivity in women

2005

Background: Previous research suggests that personality, situational context variables, and genes might interact to potentiate cardiovascular stress responses.Purpose: Our purpose is to examine interactive effects of dispositional avoidant coping and parental hypertension on cardiovascular reactivity to three different laboratory stressors.Method: Participants were 63 healthy female students. Stressors were an evaluated videotaped speech, the cold pressor, and viewing of the speech video. Heart rate and blood pressure were continuously recorded during baselines and tasks.Results: After controlling for age, body mass index, smoking status, reported exercise, alcohol consumption, oral contrac…

AdultParentsHealth Statusmedia_common.quotation_subjectStressorCold pressor testVideotape RecordingPersonality DisordersDevelopmental psychologyLife Change EventsPsychiatry and Mental healthRate pressure productBlood pressureAdaptation PsychologicalHypertensionBehavioral medicineVisual PerceptionHumansPersonalityFemalePsychologyReactivity (psychology)Body mass indexGeneral Psychologymedia_commonAnnals of Behavioral Medicine
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Consistencies and discrepancies in self- and observer-rated anxiety scales. A comparison between the self- and observer-rated Marks-Sheehan scales.

1990

The Marks-Sheehan anxiety scales are the only scales where self-ratings and observer ratings are perfectly matched by the number, the content and the scaling of the items. Therefore these scales are an excellent tool to investigate the compatibility and to study different structures in self- and observer ratings. This was done by using the data material on the Marks-Sheehan scales of the Cross National Collaborative Panic Study. In this study 1168 outpatients who met the DSM-III criteria for panic disorder were randomly allocated either to alprazolam, imipramine or placebo treatment. Our results show that the Marks-Sheehan scales are highly comparable to other established rating scales. Bot…

AdultPersonality TestsImipraminePersonality Assessmentbehavioral disciplines and activitiesDouble-Blind MethodRating scalemedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Biological PsychiatryAlprazolamGeneral NeurosciencePanic disorderSelfBehaviorally anchored rating scalesPanicGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseAnxiety DisordersPanicObserver ratingPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAlprazolamAnxietymedicine.symptomPsychologySocial psychologymedicine.drugClinical psychologyEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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Self- and observer assessment in anxiolytic drug trials: A comparison of their validity

1990

Self-rating scales are considered to be less useful for comparing different treatments in anxiety patients than observer-rating scales. However, the empirical evidence for this assumption is not adequate. A self-rating inventory of 35 items related to anxiety was perfectly parallel with an observer-rating inventory. Both instruments were used in the Cross National Collaborative Panic Study to compare the efficacy of imipramine, alprazolam and placebo in an 8-week drug trial in a sample of 1168 outpatients. The variance of the self-rating assessments was about two times higher. Both scales were equally sensitive to change; however, the measurement of change by means of the self-rating scale …

AdultPersonality TestsImipraminemedicine.medical_specialtyPsychometricsPsychometricsmedicine.drug_classPersonality AssessmentAnxiolyticDouble-Blind MethodRating scalemedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)PsychiatryBiological PsychiatryAlprazolamGeneral NeurosciencePanic disorderReproducibility of ResultsPanicGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseAnxiety DisordersPanicPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyAlprazolamAnxietymedicine.symptomPersonality Assessment InventoryPsychologyClinical psychologymedicine.drugEuropean Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
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Countertransference in Factitious Disorder

1994

In the treatment of patients with factitious disorder it is important to realize that at various levels of their experience these patients are more intimate with death than with life. This requires a particular awareness of resistance mechanisms to countertransference as well as of the importance of clinical procedures, in particular with regard to superego analysis. A requirement for establishing a psychotherapeutic alliance with patients suffering from factitious disorder is a high degree of 'therapeutic eros', hope and trust in one's own capabilities. The emphasis on a 'biophile attitude' does, however, involve the danger that the destructive potential, fantasies of death or killing, but…

AdultPsychotherapistPsychoanalysismedia_common.quotation_subjectMunchausen SyndromeShameResistance (psychoanalysis)DenialChild of Impaired ParentsId ego and super-egomedicineHumansCountertransferenceApplied PsychologyConscienceDefense Mechanismsmedia_commonPhysician-Patient RelationsGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseFactitious disorderPsychoanalytic TherapyPsychotherapyFactitious DisordersPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyPersonality DevelopmentFeelingFemaleCountertransferencePsychologySelf-Injurious BehaviorPsychotherapy and Psychosomatics
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Self‐Reported Indicators of Hypersexuality and Its Correlates in a Female Online Sample

2014

Abstract Introduction Hypersexual behavior has been a controversial and much disputed issue in the field of sexual medicine. However, only little attention has been paid to hypersexual behavior in women. Therefore, to date there is limited knowledge on the behavioral patterns of hypersexuality in women. Aims The purpose of the present study was to examine which sexual behavioral patterns are associated with self‐reported indicators of hypersexuality in a female online sample. The second aim was to evaluate the association between hypersexuality and sexual risk behavior in women. Methods In total, 988 women participated in an online survey. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to exami…

AdultSexual addictionAdolescentPersonality InventoryUrologyEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismPsychological interventionLogistic regressionDevelopmental psychologyYoung AdultEndocrinologySexual medicineEroticamedicineHumansPornographySensation seekingSexual Dysfunctions PsychologicalUnsafe SexBehavioral patternMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMasturbationPsychiatry and Mental healthSexual PartnersReproductive MedicineRegression AnalysisFemaleHypersexualitySelf Reportmedicine.symptomPsychologySexualityClinical psychologyThe Journal of Sexual Medicine
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Alexithymia and facial emotion recognition in patients with eating disorders

2006

Objective: Patients with anorexia or bulimia nervosa are reported to show high levels of alexithymia and to have difficulties recognizing facially displayed emotions. The current study tested whether it could be that facial emotion recognition is a basic skill that is independent from alexithymia. Method: We assessed emotion recognition skills and alexithymia in a group of 79 female inpatients with eating disorders and compared them with a group of 78 healthy female controls. Instruments used were the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, the Facially Expressed Emotion Labeling (FEEL) test, and the revised Symptom Check List (SCL-90-R). Results: There were no significant differences between patients a…

Adultmedia_common.quotation_subjectDevelopmental psychologyFeeding and Eating DisordersToronto Alexithymia ScaleAlexithymiaSurveys and QuestionnairesmedicineHumansExpressed emotionPersonalityAffective Symptomsmedia_commonObserver VariationFacial expressionmedicine.diagnostic_testBulimia nervosaRecognition Psychologymedicine.diseaseFacial ExpressionAffectPsychiatry and Mental healthEating disordersFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyPsychopathologyInternational Journal of Eating Disorders
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Attributional style in a case of Cotard delusion.

2007

Young and colleagues (e.g. Young, A. W., & Leafhead, K. M. (1996). Betwixt life and death: case studies of the Cotard delusion. In P. W. Halligan & J. C. Marshall (Eds.), Method in madness: Case studies in cognitive neuropsychiatry. Mahway, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.) have suggested that cases of the Cotard delusion (the belief that one is dead) result when a particular perceptual anomaly (caused by a disruption to the affective component of visual recognition) occurs in the context of an internalising attributional style. This hypothesis has not previously been tested directly. We report here an investigation of attributional style in a 24-year-old woman with Cotard delusion ("LU"). …

Adultmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Cotard delusionDelusionsDevelopmental psychologyArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)DelusionSocial cognitionDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicinePersonalityHumansmedia_commonEgoEpilepsyBrainRecognition Psychologymedicine.diseaseDeathCapgras SyndromeSocial PerceptionCase-Control StudiesFaceCognitive neuropsychiatryFemaleEncephalitis Herpes Simplexmedicine.symptomPsychologyCognitive styleCapgras SyndromePersonalityConsciousness and cognition
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Moderating Effects of Trait Anxiety on Electrodermal Reactions in Different Learning Conditions

1984

This study examined the control of the effects of trait anxiety on GSR during a problem-solving task under different conditions. Of 84 subjects, 39 men and 49 women of mean age 21 yr., 42 were classified as high in anxiety, 42 as low in anxiety. Subjects solved concept-formation tasks at different degrees of difficulty under one of three learning conditions. Low tone, unpleasant loud tone, and unpleasant electric shock provided the three kinds of error feedback. For the ‘low tone’ and ‘electric shock’ as feedback on errors significant differences in GSR values resulted for groups high and low in anxiety with the latter showing higher scores. The relevance of physiological patterns in multi…

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentPsychometricsConcept Formation050109 social psychologyError feedbackAnxietyAudiologyFeedbackDevelopmental psychologymedicineHumansTrait anxiety0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPersonality testProblem SolvingGeneral Psychology05 social sciences050301 educationMean ageGalvanic Skin ResponseTone (literature)Anxietymedicine.symptomPsychology0503 educationPsychological Reports
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Effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy supported by virtual reality in the treatment of body image in eating disorders: One year follow-up

2013

Body image disturbance is a significant maintenance and prognosis factor in eating disorders. Hence, existing eating disorder treatments can benefit from direct intervention in patients' body image. No controlled studies have yet compared eating disorder treatments with and without a treatment component centered on body image. This paper includes a controlled study comparing Cognitive Behavioral Treatment (CBT) for eating disorders with and without a component for body image treatment using Virtual Reality techniques. Thirty-four participants diagnosed with eating disorders were evaluated and treated. The clinical improvement was analyzed from statistical and clinical points of view. Result…

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentmedicine.medical_treatmentAnorexialaw.inventionFeeding and Eating DisordersYoung AdultRandomized controlled triallawIntervention (counseling)Body ImagemedicineHumansBiological PsychiatryCognitive Behavioral TherapyBulimia nervosaVirtual Reality Exposure TherapyCognitionmedicine.diseasePersonality disordersCognitive behavioral therapyPsychiatry and Mental healthEating disordersTreatment OutcomePhysical therapyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyAttitude to HealthFollow-Up StudiesClinical psychologyPsychiatry Research
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