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British Journal of Psychiatry, 1963
This paper reports an investigation in which it was found that, by dividing “paranoids” on a scale of “non-integrated psychosis”, two groups were formed which differed significantly from each other on several independent measures. When the same division was made within non-paranoid schizophrenics and within melancholics, very few such differences were ...
G A, FOULDS, A, OWEN
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This paper reports an investigation in which it was found that, by dividing “paranoids” on a scale of “non-integrated psychosis”, two groups were formed which differed significantly from each other on several independent measures. When the same division was made within non-paranoid schizophrenics and within melancholics, very few such differences were ...
G A, FOULDS, A, OWEN
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Decisional Processing in Paranoid and Non-Paranoid Schizophrenics
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 198440 schizophrenic subjects, divided into paranoid/non-paranoid categories and 14 normal controls were presented a task which involved making “same-different” judgments during random presentations of a series of visual comparison stimuli with a standard which represented the midpoint of the stimulus continuum.
M J, Lyons, S C, Fulkerson
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Illusory correlations in paranoid and non‐paranoid schizophrenia
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1984Paranoid schizophrenics, non‐paranoid schizophrenics and normals were assessed on tasks designed to demonstrate their tendency to perceive illusory correlations. It was hypothesized that paranoids would show stronger illusory correlations than normals due to the predominance of their schemata when processing information, and that non‐paranoids would ...
J H, Brennan, D R, Hemsley
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Icon thresholds in paranoid and non‐paranoid schizophrenics
British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1982Recent work in information processing points to two processes being active when a stimulus produces a short‐term memory trace, the icon. Previous work in schizophrenia seems to have blurred this important distinction and as a result the processing of the icon has been confused with the strength of the icon.
P A, Magaro, J, Page
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2015 IEEE International Symposium on Mixed and Augmented Reality - Media, Art, Social Science, Humanities and Design, 2015
This paper explores the rise of paranoid perception. It reasons that in recent years, a distinctly paranoid and conspiratorial understanding of reality has emerged in mainstream society, one that brings opportunities and implications for mixed, alternate and augmented reality experiences, particularly in the realm of games. In discussing paranoia, this
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This paper explores the rise of paranoid perception. It reasons that in recent years, a distinctly paranoid and conspiratorial understanding of reality has emerged in mainstream society, one that brings opportunities and implications for mixed, alternate and augmented reality experiences, particularly in the realm of games. In discussing paranoia, this
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A Clinical and Family Comparison of Paranoid and Non-Paranoid Schizophrenics
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1974Family studies of schizophrenia have indicated familial differences between paranoid schizophrenia and other Kraepelinian subtypes of schizophrenia. Kallmann (1938) noted the lower morbid risk for schizophrenia in the families of paranoid probands as compared to the families of hebephrenic and catatonic probands. This finding was confirmed for siblings
R C, Fowler +4 more
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2017
Paranoid Visions provides an extensive historical account of the spy and conspiracy genres in British television drama, tracing a lineage from 1960s Cold War series, through 1980s paranoid conspiracy dramas, to contemporary ‘war on terror’ thrillers.
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Paranoid Visions provides an extensive historical account of the spy and conspiracy genres in British television drama, tracing a lineage from 1960s Cold War series, through 1980s paranoid conspiracy dramas, to contemporary ‘war on terror’ thrillers.
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A Study of Thought Disorder in Paranoid and Non-Paranoid Schizophrenia
Psychopathology, 1991Thought disorder was studied in 21 paranoid and 24 non-paranoid schizophrenics fulfilling the research diagnostic criteria using the Thought, Language and Communication Scale. Chronic paranoid schizophrenics more often had tangentiality. Other thought disorders were similar in paranoid and non-paranoid schizophrenics.
P K, Mazumdar +2 more
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Paranoid? Who Says I'm Paranoid?
IT Professional, 2009By focusing all our attention on cybersecurity, have we left the backdoor open for more conventional attacks? Phillip A. Laplante, a member of IT Professional's editorial board, examines this conundrum and advises the reader to up his or her own paranoia level to address the very real security gaps we're leaving open every day our attention is diverted.
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Paranoids in the legal system. The litigious paranoid and the paranoid criminal.
The Psychiatric clinics of North America, 1995Paranoid symptomatology involving suspicions, a sense of being wronged and persecuted, along with an implacable will to retaliate against one's enemies, often translates into litigious struggles. Paranoids resort to the judicial arena to act out their own internal psychopathologic needs.
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