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Sensation seeking and bipolar affective disorder
Personality and Individual Differences, 1992Abstract Sensation seeking is a stable trait which is reflected in certain behavioral characteristics, such as risk-taking activities of many kinds. Several lines of research have suggested a relationship between sensation seeking and bipolar affective disorder. The Hypomania scale of the MMPI correlates with the Sensation Seeking Scale. Additionally,
Christopher Cronin, Marvin Zuckerman
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Sensation Seeking and Behavior Disorders
Archives of General Psychiatry, 1988To the Editor.— Cloninger 1 has recently presented an interesting proposal for classifications of personality variants based on monoamine functions. One of his three postulated dimensions of personality is termed novelty seeking . A reading of the description of this dimension suggests that it is practically identical to the trait dimension termed ...
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Selective Attention for Hyperventilatory Sensations in Panic Disorder
Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 2000According to cognitive theories, panic patients are assumed to display selective attention for feared bodily sensations. To date there has only been indirect evidence for this based on performance on reaction time tasks such as the modified Stroop task and the dot probe detection task.
S, Kroeze, M A, van Den Hout
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Somatic sensations, anxiety, and control in panic disorder
Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 1994This case study of a woman with panic disorder with agoraphobia illustrates the relationships among somatic sensations, anxiety, and the subjective sense of control, and of these three factors to panic disorder. Helping the client alter her caffeine intake and dietary habits led to a significant reduction in panic attacks, but had less impact on her ...
M S, Salzer, H, Berenbaum
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Detection of somatic sensations in panic disorder
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1994Twenty-four panic disorder patients and 25 nonclinical subjects underwent double-breath inhalations of 5, 10, and 20% carbon dioxide (CO2) or room air. All subjects were blind to inhalation content and were required to guess if the inhalation contained CO2.
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[Depressive disorder with pathological body sensations].
Zhurnal nevrologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova, 2006A group of patients with depressive disorder, depressive episode (DE) according to the ICD-10, with episodic or recurrent course and the presence of pathological body sensations (PBS) in the form of senestoalgic, senestoalgic-senestopathic and senestopathic syndromes has been studied.
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No superior perception of hyperventilatory sensations in panic disorder
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1998It has been argued that panic disorder patients may be more skilled at detecting changes in actual physiology than others. The present study investigated if panic patients are better than controls in perceiving sensations produced by light hyperventilation.
S, Kroeze, M A, van den Hout
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Pain Syndromes and Disorders of Sensation
2007Although routine clinical neurological examination generally does not reveal any abnormality of sensation in persons with Parkinson’s disease (PD), subjective sensory symptoms are quite frequently present, and objective abnormalities of proprioceptive function and sensorimotor integration have been demonstrated with sophisticated testing.
Blair Ford, Ronald F. Pfeiffer
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Personality traits, personality disorders and sensational interests in mentally disordered offenders
Legal and Criminological Psychology, 2003Purpose. Sensational interests (e.g. an interest in the occult or the methods of violence) in mentally disordered offenders are claimed to signify greater risk of psychopathology, but evidence to support this view is slight. Methods. The relationships between self‐reported DSM‐IV personality disorder (PD), general personality traits ...
Egan, V +4 more
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Sensation Seeking and Behavior Disorders-Reply
Archives of General Psychiatry, 1988Many clinicians and researchers have responded enthusiastically to recent articles in which I described a general neurobiologic learning theory of personality and its relationship to anxiety and mood disorders, 1,2 alcoholism, 3 and personality disorders.
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