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Natalie Mitten

http://www.tamiu.edu/~cferguson/desensitization.pdf - 0 views

    • Natalie Mitten
       
      Better research these studies sited. Huesmann & Miller, 1994; Freeman, 2002; Grimes, Anderson & Bergen, 2008; Olson, 2004; Bushman & Anderson, 2009; Ferguson and Dyck, 2012; Hetsroni 2012; Drabman and Thomas, 1975-6; Horton & Santogrossi, 1978; Molitor & Hirsch, 1994; Woodfield, 1988; Funk, Baldacci, Pasold & Baumgardener, 2004; Adachi & Willoughby, 2011; Freedman, 2002; Przybylski, Rigby & Ryan, 2010; Savage, 2008; Simmons, Nelson & Simonsohn, 2011; 
    • Natalie Mitten
       
      "For each type, three TV episodes were selected as exemplars. Shows were chosen to be similar on variables other than violent content (e.g., recentness, dramatics, network release, presence of female characters, etc.)
    • Natalie Mitten
       
      What is a Likert scale?
    • Natalie Mitten
       
      State Anxiety Scale?
Natalie Mitten

Studying the Effects of Playing Violent Video Games - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • “We found that higher rates of violent video game sales related to a decrease in crimes, and especially violent crimes,”
  • No one knows for sure what these findings mean
  •  
    Considering studying the effect of the media on young people. It appears from this article, though, that it's quite a tricky subject. Let's hope that, if there's a will, there's a way.
Natalie Mitten

Sibling aggression linked to poor mental health - 0 views

  •  
    Probably couldn't do much work with this, because it's a very qualitative inquiry, but is a quite interesting subject. 
Natalie Mitten

The adolescent brain: Beyond raging hormones - Harvard Health Publications - 1 views

  • Neurons (gray matter) and synapses (junctions between neurons)
  • roliferate in the cerebral cortex and are then gradually pruned throughout adolescence
  • 40% of all synapses are eliminated, largely in the frontal lobes.
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  • the white insulating coat of myelin
  • on the axons that carry signals between nerve cells continues to accumulate,
  • a process not completed until the early 20s
  • Among the last connections to be fully established are the links between the prefrontal cortex
  • seat of
  • judgment and problem-solving, and the emotional centers in the limbic system, especially the amygdala.
  • The adolescent brain pours out adrenal stress hormones, sex hormones,
  • and growth hormone, which in turn influence brain development.
  • Sex hormones act in the limbic system and in the raphe nucleus, source of the
  • neurotransmitter serotonin
  • things can go wrong in many ways,
  • Stress can retard the growth of the hippocampus, which consolidates
  • memories.
Moeishia King

PsycNET - Display Record - 0 views

  • none of these bias blind spots were attenuated by measures of cognitive sophistication such as cognitive ability or thinking dispositions related to bias. If anything, a larger bias blind spot was associated with higher cognitive ability
    • Moeishia King
       
      Good to have somethingfrom a jouranl. No book
  • bias blind spot arises when people report that thinking biases are more prevalent in others than in themselves. Bias turns out to be relatively easy to recognize in the behaviors of others, but often difficult to detect in one's own judgments.
Indea Armstrong

Planarians offer a better view of eye development - 0 views

  • intense study for their renowned ability to regenerate any missing body par
    • Indea Armstrong
       
      Is the flatworm harmful ?
  • courtesy of Whitehead Institute researchers, who this week are publishing in Cell Reports
Katie Raborn

Schizophrenia - What Is Schizophrenia? | ehealthMD - 0 views

  • person finds it difficult to tell the difference between real and imagined experiences, to think logically, to express feelings, or to behave appropriately.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      A person with schizophrenia find it difficult to tell the difference between the real world and whats in their head, they cant think logically, express feelings, or know how to behave properly
  • People with schizophrenia may hear internal voices not heard by others or may see things that are not really ther
  • threatening and can make them fearful and withdrawn
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  • They also may have trouble organizing their thoughts and expressing themselves
  • speech and behavior can be so disorganized that they may seem frightening to others
  • most misunderstood mental illnesses
  • Jekyll-and-Hyde" type of split personality
  • Schizophrenia literally means "a split mind," and this may be where the misconception of split personality took root.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Schizophrenia means split mind
  • difficulty functioning in society, at work, and in school
  • But the symptoms of schizophrenia vary widely from one person to another. In some people, the dissociated feelings caused by the illness are a constant part of life. In others, the symptoms will come and go. People with schizophrenia do not always act abnormally. They may appear perfectly responsible and in control, even when experiencing hallucinations or delusions.
  • Schizophrenia cannot be cured
    • Katie Raborn
       
      The disorder cannot be cured but the symptoms can be reduced
Katie Raborn

Schizophrenia - 0 views

  • no known single cause responsible for schizophrenia
    • Katie Raborn
       
      There isn't a cause for schizophrenia.
  • chemical imbalance in the brain is an inherited factor which is necessary for schizophrenia to develop.
  • -genetic, behavioral, and environmental--play a role in the development of this mental health condition.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      The disorder can be caused by behavioral, genetic, and environmental roles.
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  • considered to be multifactorially inherited
  • Multifactorial inheritance means that "many factors"
  • where a combination of genes from both parents, in addition to unknown environmental factors, produce the trait or condition
  • factors are usually both genetic and environmental
  • Often, one gender (either males or females) is affected more frequently than the other in multifactorial traits
    • Katie Raborn
       
      one gender in the family is effect more than the other gender. Which means one gender is more likely to show the problem of having schizophrenia.
  • means that one gender is more likely to show the problem
  • Slightly more males develop schizophrenia in childhood, however, by adolescence schizophrenia affects males and females equally.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      More males are effected in early childhood rather than females but it still effects males and females equally.
  • Although schizophrenia affects men and women equally, symptoms in men generally begin earlier than in women
  • schizophrenia first appears in men during their late teens or early 20s
  • women, schizophrenia often first appears during their 20s or early 30s.
  • schizophrenia affects 2.7 million Americans
  • child born into a family with one or more schizophrenic family member has a greater chance of developing schizophrenia than a child born into a family with no history of schizophrenia.
  • chance for a sibling to also be diagnosed with schizophrenia is 7 to 8 percen
  • If a parent has schizophrenia, the chance for a child to have the disorder is 10 to 15 percen
  • Risks increase with multiple affected family members.
  • Distorted perception of reality (i.e., difficulty telling dreams from reality) Confused thinking (i.e., confusing television with reality) Detailed and bizarre thoughts and ideas Suspiciousness and/or paranoia (fearfulness that someone, or something, is going to harm them) Hallucinations (seeing, hearing, or feeling things that are not real such as hearing voices telling them to do something) Delusions (ideas that seem real but are not based in reality) Extreme moodiness Severe anxiety and/or fearfulness Flat affect (lack of emotional expression when speaking) or inability to manage emotions Difficulty in performing functions at work and/or school Exaggerated self-worth and/or unrealistic sense of superiority of one's self Social withdrawal (severe problems in making and keeping friends ) Disorganized or catatonic behavior (suddenly becoming agitated and confused, or sitting and staring, as if immobilized) Odd behaviors
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Some symptoms of Schizophrenia but people can experience different symptoms of the disorder
  • The symptoms of schizophrenia are often classified as positive (symptoms including delusions, hallucinations, and bizarre behavior), negative (symptoms including flat affect, withdrawal, and emotional unresponsiveness), disorganized speech (including speech that is incomprehensible), and disorganized or catatonic behavior (including marked mood swings, sudden aggressive, or confusion, followed by sudden motionlessness and staring).
    • Katie Raborn
       
      There are different classifications of schizophrenia such as positive, negative, and catatonic behavior.
  • diagnosed by a psychiatrist
  • Specific treatment for schizophrenia will be determined by your physician based on: Your age, overall health, and medical history Extent of the disease Your tolerance for specific medications, procedures, or therapies Expectations for the course of the disease Your opinion or preference
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Treatment is based on many different things like age, health and medical history
  • Types of treatment that may be helpful to an individual with schizophrenia may include: Medications (also called psychopharmacological management; to reduce the symptoms of schizophrenia), including the following: Neuroleptics--a specialized class of medications used to treat schizophrenia. Neuroleptics are used primarily to treat the pervasive, intrusive, and disturbing thoughts of a person with schizophrenia. They are designed to help minimize the severity of delusions and hallucinations the individual is experiencing. Antipsychotic medications--medications that act against the symptoms of psychotic illness, but do not cure the illness. However, these medications can reduce symptoms or reduce the severity of symptoms; a specialized class of medications used to treat schizophrenia. Individual and family psychotherapy (including cognitive and behavioral therapy) Specialized educational and/or structured activity programs (i.e., social skills training, vocational training, speech and language therapy) Self-help and support groups
  • Preventive measures to reduce the incidence of schizophrenia are not known at this time
Katie Raborn

A story that doesn't hold up | Harvard Gazette - 0 views

  • scenario belongs strictly to the realm of fiction.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Someone who has DID can still be convicted of a crime.
  • Harvard’s Richard J. McNally, Rafaele Huntjens of the University of Groningen, and Bruno Verschuere of the University of Amsterdam
    • Katie Raborn
       
      creditable source
  • patients do have knowledge of their other identities.
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  • McNally, a professor in the Department of Psychology
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Creditable source
  • In addition to raising the public profile of the disorder, the book also marked the first suggestion that alternate personalities were created as a way to wall off traumatic memories of physical or sexual abuse, and that those memories could be recovered with the help of a therapist.
  • The idea at the time was that the mind locks these memories away, but with the help of a therapist, and through hypnosis or the use of drugs like Sodium Pentothal, these memories could become accessible,
  • Called a “concealed information task,” the test’s goal is ostensibly simple: identify words as they flash on a computer screen. If one of a small set of randomly selected “target” words appears, press yes. For all other words, press no. The catch, McNally said, is that while many of the words hold no meaning for the patients, a small subset of the non-target words are taken from two autobiographical questionnaires patients fill out at the start of the test — one while inhabiting one personality, the second in another.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They conducted a test and fooled the patients with DID that said that they have no memory of what has happened.
  • When one of those personally relevant words — such as a best friend’s name, favorite food, or favorite sport — appears on screen, McNally said, most patients’ first impulse is to press the yes button. Within moments, however, they realize the word doesn’t appear on the target list, and they eventually give the “correct” answer by pressing no.
  • All participants showed a nearly identical lag for words that were relevant to their alternate personalities, McNally said, suggesting that the information wasn’t locked away in a separate identity.
Katie Raborn

Dissociative Identity Disorder: Overview and Current Research - Student Pulse - 0 views

  • who presented as a male (23 years) and a female (17 years). The client (host) was female and 30 years old, and had been diagnosed with DID for 13 years. During presentation of the young female personality, the client reported hearing the male alter, which was her primary symptom, along with anxiety and identity dissociation. The client experienced remission of anxiety and hallucinatory symptoms after a month of treatment with perospirone. Treatment was continued for 5 months, and medication was gradually reduced over a period of 9 months. At the time of writing, the client had experienced remission of dissociative symptoms for 1 year
    • Katie Raborn
       
      There was a study on a 30 year old women and she had two different personalities.
  • DID can involve some degree of amnesi
  • Autobiographical memories may differ between alter personalities, allowing the host to retain positive memories while alters contain negative traumatic memorie
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • This study clarifies the mechanism and function of memory in various dissociative states and helps explain why trauma might result in the development of alters.
Katie Raborn

Dissociative Identity Disorder: Overview and Current Research - Student Pulse - 0 views

  • In one study involving 425 doctoral-level clinicians, nearly one-third believed that a diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder was more appropriate than DID.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They did a study on DID to see how its diagnosis.
  • DID requires the presence of at least two personalities, with a personality being identified as a entity having a unique pattern of perception
  • These personalities must also display a pattern of exerting control on the individual’s behavior
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  • Extensive and unusual loss of memory pertaining to personal information another feature of DID
    • Katie Raborn
       
      When you have DID you can loose your memory
  • Differential diagnosis generally involves ruling out the effects of chemical substances and medical (as opposed to psychological) conditions. When evaluating children, it is also important to ensure that symptoms are distinguishable from imaginary play (American Psychiatric Association, 2000).
  • In clinical populations, the estimated prevalence of DID ranges from 0.5 to 1.0% (Maldonado, Butler, & Spiegel, 2002). In the general population, estimates of prevalence are somewhat higher, ranging from 1-5% (Rubin & Zorumski, 2005). Females are more likely to receive a diagnosis of DID, at a ratio of 9:1 (Lewis-Hall, 2002
  • High percentages of individuals with DID have comorbid diagnoses of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or Borderline Personality Disorde
  • DID commonly have a previous diagnosis of Schizophrenia. However, this most likely represents a misdiagnosis rather than comorbidity, du
  • Other possible comorbid disorders involve substance abuse, eating disorders, somatoform disorders, problems of anxiety and mood, personality disorders, psychotic disorders, and organic mental disorders (ISSD, 2005), OCD, or some combination of conversion and somatoform disorder
  • Other factors influencing a poor prognosis include remaining in abusive situations, involvement with criminal activity, substance abuse, eating disorders, or antisocial personality features
  • the average age of diagnosis is thirt
    • Katie Raborn
       
      The average person who gets diagnosed with the disorder is at thirty. What happens to when people are younger and not diagnosed
  • One study found that the risk of developing a dissociative disorder (DD) increased seven times with a child’s exposure to trauma.
  • Dissociative Identity Disorder is linked to childhood abuse in 95-98% of the cases
  • Studies on genetic factors contributing to DID present mixed findings. However, one study involving dyzogotic and monozygotic twins found that considerable variance in experiences of pathological dissociation could be attributed to both shared and non-shared environmental experiences, but heritability appeared to have no effect (Waller & Ross, 1997).
  • Treatment most commonly follows a framework of “1) safety, stabilization and symptom reduction, 2) working directly and in depth with traumatic memories, and 3) identity integration and rehabilitation” (p. 89).
  • A study involving 280 outpatient participants (98% DID diagnosis) from five different races (Caucasian, African American, Hispanic, Asian, and Other) demonstrated the effectiveness of a similar five-phase model in reducing symptoms of dissociation.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They did a study on how effect the treatments are.
Caitlan Granger

Autism Diagnosis | Research, Funding, Support | Autism Science Foundation - 0 views

    • Caitlan Granger
       
      Lists a lot of symptoms of autism, seems to be a very reliable source.
  • Studies show that about half of children with autism who are in an evidence-based early intervention program from age 3-5 can gain enough skills to be mainstreamed for kindergarten.
  • There are now evidence based interventions for babies as young as 12 months old, and studies are underway to design treatments for 9 month old babies at risk for autism.
Moeishia King

Why smart people do stupid things - 0 views

  • you can be intelligent without being rational. And you can be a rational thinker without being especially intelligent.
    • Moeishia King
       
      This makes complete since to me, seeing as i'm going from personal experience.
  • Earlier this year, Yale University Press published Stanovich’s book What Intelligence Tests Miss: The Psychology of Rational Thought.
    • Moeishia King
       
      Credible source.
  • Fortunately, rational thinking can be taught, and Stanovich thinks the school system should expend more effort on it. Teaching basic statistical and scientific thinking helps. And so does teaching more general thinking strategies. Studies show that a good way to improve critical thinking is to think of the opposite.
    • Moeishia King
       
      Good to know. I didn't think that it could be taught but I guess it makes sense because you can learn just about anything.
Anna Wermuth

Borderline Personality Disorder: No Man Is an Island: Scientific American - 0 views

    • Anna Wermuth
       
      struggles with interpersonal relationships - the most crippling aspect of BPD
Anna Wermuth

Diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder Is Often Flawed: Scientific American - 1 views

    • Anna Wermuth
       
      "the term was a misnomer because BPD bears little relation to most psychotic disorders." this is true, and most people are unaware of the differences between BPD and other illnesses, especially bipolar.
Lindsey Graham

By keeping the beat, sea lion sheds new light on animals' movements to sound - 0 views

  • evidence of an animal that is not capable of vocal mimicry but can keep the beat,
  • American Psychological Association
  • published online April 1 in APA's Journal of Comparative Psychology.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • "Dancing is universal among humans, and until recently, it was thought to be unique to humans as well," said Cook
  • ed by doctoral candidate Peter Cook at the Long Marine Lab at UCSC.
  • study co-author Colleen Reichmuth, PhD, with the Institute of Marine Sciences at the University of California at Santa Cruz
  • Apr. 1, 2013
  • six experiment
Vaiva Zokaite

Lack of Sleep Messes With Your Genes : Discovery News - 0 views

  •  
    I could write about this. Many teenagers don't sleep enough because of videogames, homework, etc. so it might attract attention.
Katie Stevenson

Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America - Information About Asthma, Allergies, Food Al... - 0 views

  • An estimated 50 million Americans suffer from all types of allergies
  • Allergy is the 5th leading chronic disease in the U.S. among all ages,
  • 3rd most common chronic disease among children under 18 years old
  •  
    Allergies facts
Natalie Mitten

http://blogs.cornell.edu/mendlelab/files/2012/10/Mendle-et-al-2012-JAP-1kqyfx3.pdf - 0 views

    • Natalie Mitten
       
      This would be super helpful
Natalie Mitten

PLOS ONE: Sex Differences in Mathematics and Reading Achievement Are Inversely Related:... - 0 views

    • Natalie Mitten
       
      Very interesting study; international, as well. 
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