Psychiatry, Volume 19Guilford Press, 1956 - Insanity (Law) |
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Page 384
... confabulations do not seem to be related to illness . In the pres- ent paper the subject of confabulation following brain injury is treated as a whole with reference to content , to the environmental situation , including the conditions ...
... confabulations do not seem to be related to illness . In the pres- ent paper the subject of confabulation following brain injury is treated as a whole with reference to content , to the environmental situation , including the conditions ...
Page 387
... confabulation itself . The com- parable roles of confabulation and denial of the content was shown in the case of one man who first confabulated that he was the father of a child . Several months later he claimed that a girl , a fellow ...
... confabulation itself . The com- parable roles of confabulation and denial of the content was shown in the case of one man who first confabulated that he was the father of a child . Several months later he claimed that a girl , a fellow ...
Page 389
... confabulation pa- tients generally seemed to be without clinical anxiety . This attitude persisted throughout the entire hospitalization in patients in whom the confabulation was succeeded by the language patterns just described . In ...
... confabulation pa- tients generally seemed to be without clinical anxiety . This attitude persisted throughout the entire hospitalization in patients in whom the confabulation was succeeded by the language patterns just described . In ...
Contents
AFFECTIVE SYMBOLISM SOCIAL NORMS AND MENTAL ILLNESS John Cumming and Elaine | 77 |
EDITORIAL NOTES | 95 |
BOOK REVIEWS AND NOTICES | 104 |
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activities Amer analysis anxiety appetitive behavior aspects Assn Asst attempt attitudes audience basic become behavior Buber charismatic Chestnut Lodge child Chinese clinical collaboration communication Communist concept confabulation countertransference course culture described discussion doctors ence entropy example experience expressed fact fantasy Farber father feelings Freud Frieda Fromm-Reichmann function Harry Stack Sullivan havior Hosp hostility human integration interaction interpersonal interviewer leader Martin Buber Mayo Clinic means ment mental hospital mother norms NP's nursing objects observed oral organization parents participation patient patterns penis perception person present prisoners problems Psychiatry psycho psychoanalytic psychological psychosis psychotherapy question Reference footnote relation relationship represented response role schizophrenic School sciences seems sexual Sigmund Freud sion situation social staff structure Sullivan symbolic technique theory thera therapeutic therapist therapy thought tient tion tive treatment Univ ward woman York