YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Psychotherapy and Bipolar Disorder
Essays 601 - 630
Rubia, Smith, Brammer, Toone, and Taylor (2005) report on the use of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to demonstrate t...
their level of obesity, but, until this study, little was known as to whether or not there is a "relationship between dieting and ...
produced or vowels, dipthongs, and consonants (Toppelberg, Munir, and Nieto-Castanon, 2006). One of the primary culprits ...
group, such as "those that control the eye," or it may become more generalized (Yee). The patients facial expression and speech ma...
Another loss of life associated with war is the loss of wildlife and the destruction of nature. War creates battlefields that rese...
to a Veterans Administration (VA) inpatient program for the treatment of substance abuse. Research has definitively established ...
physician Enrique Morselli back in 1891 as dysmorphophobia, BDD has been defined as "the fear of having a deformity" (Hunt, Thienh...
contract, not smiling at appropriate times (Bressert, 2006). The incidence of shyness is much less than that of social phobia bu...
childrens response through talking increased among the adults who were trained (Ezell and Justice, 2002; see also Rabidoux and Mac...
Kids, 2008). Those with severe emotional problems may demonstrate thinking that is distorted, severe mood swings, an abundance of ...
may not contact a childs parents unless something drastic has taken place, in a special education setting, the parents and teacher...
with some type of cognitive deficit disorder such as dementia or Alzheimers. In order to anticipate the percentage of those who w...
conflicts -- is gaining momentum within school districts across the country (Spence, 2003). Knowing how to diffuse an escalating ...
extreme discomfort (Pallanti, 2008; Hill and Beamish, 2007; Poyurovsky, 2007). As can be implied from the foregoing information,...
life, though they may never be completely free of the disease (Wilkins, 2007). Its important to recognize that OCD is different f...
food poisoning; from that point forward in young Ruth Deanes life, she was controlled by an invisible force that made her life a l...
the increased distance from the equator. In Studies in North America Rosenthal (1983) observed a prevalence in the winter of 1.4%...
is that the efforts of bulimic patients to restrict food are interspersed with periods of extreme overeating, or "binging," which ...
or a loved one; these fears often present themselves as disturbing thoughts (Definition of obsessive-compulsive disorder, 2002). T...
addicted to something else such as alcohol, gambling or compulsive shopping (Spencer, 2006). The realization that this is a proble...
habits are partially responsible for keeping him at arms length from the rest of the world. Considered for decades to be a diseas...
actually felt the building shake, for example, are at the most risk for the disorder (2001). At the same time, one psychologist cl...
p. 7) of children and adolescents. Scientists had long suspected that a major component of the problem is a malfunction in the br...
conjunction between visual input and the organisation of complex behavioural patterns. Studies which have compared the higher cogn...
to a lack of social skills, or rather, the lack of the ability to use the social skills are prevalent in all environments. Child...
This paper of five pages provides a critical overview of the material that addresses ADD. There are eight bibliographic sources c...
genetic cause is loss of yet unidentified genes normally contributed by the father" (Internet source). Information at the PWSAs we...
reasons, of course, often based on stereotypes of race, gender, age or income that lead them to believe a particular candidate wil...
time and more than 90% would pass away before their first birthday without treatment (1996). Clearly, if nothing is done, chances ...
the occurrence and nonoccurrence of problem behaviors (2001). With the use of such an approach, the function of behavior is repres...