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Correlative Study of Aggression in Adult Patients With Mood Disorder Admitted in a Tertiary Hospital From 2015 to 2017: A Retrospective Study. [PDF]

open access: yesCureus
Arboleda JLL   +8 more
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Aggression

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1986
Pathologic aggression can be evaluated in terms of its psychosocial provocations, but it also must be recognized as a physiologically generated behavior and that disruptions of those controlling physiologic mechanisms can lead to pathologic states of aggression. Laboratory and clinical evidence indicates that the phylogenetically older limbic system is
openaire   +2 more sources

Aggression

Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal, 1964
Aggression as a basic drive was considered by Freud to arise from the Death Instinct i.e. it was viewed as a counter-drive to libido. Objectors to this theory view aggression as normal if it tends to preserve the individual and the species, and pathological if it does not. They regard aggression, not as a basic drive, but as an outgrowth of frustration
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The Perception of Aggression

Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, 1997
Several academic and clinical disciplines are involved in clarifying the concept of aggression by formulating operational and descriptive definitions. In the present paper the validity of the definitions of aggression, reported by nurses in an earlier qualitative study, is examined, using a survey approach among nurses of five general psychiatric ...
Jansen, Gerard, Dassen, T, Moorer, P
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Predicting aggressive behavior with the aggressiveness‐IAT

Aggressive Behavior, 2014
The Implicit Association Test (IAT, Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998) was adapted to assess the automatically activated (implicit) self‐concept of aggressiveness. In three studies the validity of the Aggressiveness‐IAT (Agg‐IAT) was supported by substantial correlations with self‐report measures of aggressiveness.
Rainer, Banse   +2 more
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Serotonin and Aggression

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2004
Abstract: The neurotransmitter serotonin (5‐HT) has been implicated in the modulation of aggression in animals and humans. A longstanding dogma that aggression and serotonergic activity are inversely related has to be abandoned in light of many new findings.
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Dimensions of aggression: The perception of aggressive episodes

British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1980
The perception of real‐life aggressive episodes was studied, in order to (a) represent the cognitive dimensions used by judges to differentiate between such episodes, (b) to evaluate the perceived differences between different categories of episodes, and (c) to assess the effects of the judges' age, sex and attitudes on their ...
J P, Forgas, L B, Brown, J, Menyhart
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