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Specialty: Psychiatry & Psychology
Condition: Brain Tumor

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Total 75 results found since Jan 2013.

The Multi-Modal Evaluation of Sensory Sensitivity (MESSY): assessing a commonly missed symptom of acquired brain injury
Conclusions: These results show that sensory hypersensitivity is prevalent after different types of acquired brain injury as well as across several sensory modalities. The MESSY can improve recognition of these symptoms and facilitate further research.PMID:37291083 | DOI:10.1080/13854046.2023.2219024
Source: The Clinical Neuropsychologist - June 8, 2023 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Hella Thielen Irene M C Huenges Wajer Nora Tuts Lies Welkenhuyzen Cristophe Lafosse Celine R Gillebert Source Type: research

What Causes Memory Problems?
The cause of memory problems matters for trying to improve them. In this post, we're exploring the three main causes of memory problems and how each affects your brain.read more
Source: Psychology Today Depression Center - May 29, 2014 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Diane Roberts Stoler, Ed.D. Tags: Depression Health Memory Neuroscience Alzheimer ' s disease aneurysm brain tumor concussion dementia dopamine MS multiple sclerosis Neglect neuromodulators Parkinson stroke TBI trauma traumatic brain injury Source Type: news

Stability and change in disease prestige: A comparative analysis of three surveys spanning a quarter of a century
Publication date: Available online 14 March 2017 Source:Social Science & Medicine Author(s): Dag Album, Lars E.F. Johannessen, Erik B. Rasmussen In this paper, we present a comparative analysis of three survey studies of disease prestige in medical culture. The studies were conducted in 1990, 2002 and 2014 using the same research design. In each of the three rounds, a sample of Norwegian physicians was asked to rate a set of 38 diseases on a scale from 1 to 9 according to the prestige they believed health personnel in general would award them. The results show a remarkable stability in the prestige rank order over...
Source: Social Science and Medicine - March 14, 2017 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research

Language processing from the perspective of electrical stimulation mapping.
Abstract Electrical Stimulation (ES) is a neurostimulation technique that is used to localize language functions in the brain of people with intractable epilepsy and/or brain tumors. We reviewed 25 ES articles published between 1984 and 2018 and interpreted them from a cognitive neuropsychological perspective. Our aim was to highlight ES as a tool to further our understanding of cognitive models of language. We focused on associations and dissociations between cognitive functions within the framework of two non-neuroanatomically specified models of language. Also, we discussed parallels between the ES and the stro...
Source: Cognitive Neuropsychology - July 12, 2018 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Rofes A, Mandonnet E, de Aguiar V, Rapp B, Tsapkini K, Miceli G Tags: Cogn Neuropsychol Source Type: research

Telepsychotherapy with children and families: Lessons gleaned from two decades of translational research.
We describe adaptation for international contexts and strategies for troubleshooting technological challenges and working with families of varying socioeconomic strata. The extensive research literature reviewed and synthesized provides considerable support for the utility of telepsychotherapy with children with neurological conditions and their families and underscores its high level of acceptability with both diverse clinical populations and providers. During this period of heightened vulnerability and stress and reduced access to usual supports and services, telepsychotherapy approaches such as online family problem-sol...
Source: Journal of Psychotherapy Integration - June 8, 2020 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research