Perception of self and other in psychosis: a method for analyzing the structure of the phenomenology
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TL;DR: This work investigated the internal cognitive structure (i.e., connections) of some delusions pertaining to self and others in a patient with psychosis who was very fluent and thus able to provide a lucid account of his phenomenological experiences, using a clustering method (HICLAS disjunctive model) in conjunction with standard neuropsychological tests.
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Abstract: Although the phenomenology accompanying psychoses is fascinating, hitherto empirical examinations have been qualitative and thus limited in their clinical conclusions regarding the actual underlying cognitive mechanisms responsible for the formation and maintenance of the delusion, which is often distressing to the patient. We investigated the internal cognitive structure (i.e., connections) of some delusions pertaining to self and others in a patient with psychosis who was very fluent and thus able to provide a lucid account of his phenomenological experiences. To this end we employed a clustering method (HICLAS disjunctive model) in conjunction with standard neuropsychological tests. A well-fitting, but parsimonious solution revealed the absence of unique feature sets associated with certain persons, findings that provide a compelling case underlying the confusion in certain instances between real and delusional people. We illustrate the methodology in one patient and suggest that it is sensitive enough to explore the structure of delusions, which in conjunction with standard neuropsychological and clinical assessments promises to be useful in uncovering the mechanisms underlying delusions in psychosis.
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The structure of self-concept and mental well-being in university students in China: a HiCLAS analysis
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References
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Metaphors We Live By
George Lakoff,Mark Johnson +1 more
- 01 Jan 1980
TL;DR: Lakoff and Johnson as mentioned in this paper suggest that these basic metaphors not only affect the way we communicate ideas, but actually structure our perceptions and understandings from the beginning, and they offer an intriguing and surprising guide to some of the most common metaphors and what they can tell us about the human mind.
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Insight and Psychosis
TL;DR: It is proposed that insight is not an ‘all-or-none’ phenomenon but is composed of three distinct, overlapping dimensions, namely, the recognition that one has a mental illness, compliance with treatment, and the ability to relabel unusual mental events as pathological.
Insight and psychosis
TL;DR: It is proposed that insight is not an 'all-or-none' phenomenon but is composed of three distinct, overlapping dimensions, namely, the recognition that one has a mental illness, compliance with treatment, and the ability to relabel unusual mental events (delusions and hallucinations) as pathological.
Perception of self and other in major depression.
Michael A. Gara,Robert L. Woolfolk,Bertram D. Cohen,Ruth B. Goldston,Lesley A. Allen,James Novalany +5 more
TL;DR: Cluster analysis (HICLAS) showed that more cognitive differentiation of negative self-perceptions (negative self-complexity) was characteristic of clinical depression and a positive (or negative) view of self was highly correlated with a positive view of parents and significant others.
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