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Reconceiving delusion

International Review of Psychiatry, 2004
Delusions are critical components in a number of mental disorders, schizophrenia foremost. What are they? The standard view is that they are a type of belief--a pathological belief. Unfortunately, the standard view does not consistently correspond to clinical practice, where the term 'delusion' often applies to non-beliefs.
G Lynn, Stephens, George, Graham
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Delusions demand attention

Neurocase, 1996
We used a variant of the Stroop paradigm to investigate attention bias in a young woman (JK) with delusional beliefs that she had died and that members of her family had changed. JK was shown sets of words printed in different colours of ink, and was asked to name the colour of each word. Sets of words were chosen which related to her delusions, and to
K M, Leafhead, A W, Young, T K, Szulecka
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Internet Delusions

Southern Medical Journal, 2003
As the use of computers, the Internet, and Internet technology becomes more pervasive in society, psychopathological thought content characterized by the incorporation of the Internet into delusions and hallucinations will become increasingly common. In the following report, three cases of psychotic inpatients are briefly presented to exemplify this ...
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Understanding Delusions

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1995
Delusions traditionally have been considered as fixed, false beliefs, born of morbidity. Whereas this definition serves to orient the clinician to the phenomena at hand, each element breaks down under scrutiny. It has been shown that delusions are not necessarily false, although in some sense they are discordant with reality.
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Depressive Delusion

Psychopathology, 1991
In this study of 160 consecutively admitted inpatients who met ICD-9 criteria of endogenous depression, mood-congruent depressive delusions were ascertained in 14.4% (n = 23). The total HRSD score was significantly higher in the delusional than in the nondelusional group. Delusions of guilt were recorded by far the most frequently.
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Delusions about illusions

Perception, 2014
Abstract The term illusion is used to describe situations where we make mistakes and perceive the surrounding world incorrectly. But what is an illusion? Richard Gregory described illusions as ‘departures from reality’ and this fits with our everyday idea that illusions represent situations where what we perceive does not correspond to ...
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Delusion

2013
Cognitive approaches contribute to our understanding of delusions by providing an explanatory framework that extends beyond the personal level to the sub personal level of information-processing systems. According to one influential cognitive approach, two factors are required to account for the content of a delusion, its initial adoption as a belief ...
Martin Davies, Andy Egan
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[Talking about delusion, what delusion?]

Soins. Psychiatrie, 2023
When we talk about the clinic of delusional symptoms, we are first and foremost affirming that delusions exist. Professionals working in psychiatry know that delusions can be listened to, that they give meaning to suffering and are part of the history of the subject. Taking the time to reflect on this type of symptom allows us to invest in the clinical
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Delusion

2018
In a clinical context, delusions are symptoms of a number of psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia and dementia, manifesting as beliefs that are implausible and resistant to counter-evidence. In the philosophical literature, the nature of delusions (what they are) and their formation (what causes them) have been examined with increasing ...
GUNN R, BORTOLOTTI L
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