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  2. Personality pathology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_pathology

    Personality pathology refers to enduring patterns of cognition, emotion, and behavior that negatively affect a person's adaptation. In psychiatry and clinical psychology , it is characterized by adaptive inflexibility, vicious cycles of maladaptive behavior, and emotional instability under stress.

  3. Developmental psychopathology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Developmental_psychopathology

    Atypical development and typical development are mutually informative. Therefore, developmental psychopathology is not the study of pathological development, but the study of the basic mechanisms that cause developmental pathways to diverge toward pathological or typical outcomes; Development leads to either adaptive or maladaptive outcomes.

  4. Psychopathology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychopathology

    Psychopathology is the study of mental illness. It includes the signs and symptoms of all mental disorders. The field includes abnormal cognition, maladaptive behavior, and experiences which differ according to social norms.

  5. Pathophysiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathophysiology

    Pathology is the medical discipline that describes conditions typically observed during a disease state, whereas physiology is the biological discipline that describes processes or mechanisms operating within an organism. Pathology describes the abnormal or undesired condition (symptoms of a disease), whereas pathophysiology seeks to explain ...

  6. Dimensional models of personality disorders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimensional_models_of...

    Dimensional models are intended to reflect what constitutes personality disorder symptomology according to a spectrum, rather than in a dichotomous way.As a result of this they have been used in three key ways; firstly to try to generate more accurate clinical diagnoses, secondly to develop more effective treatments and thirdly to determine the underlying etiology of disorders.

  7. Altered state of consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altered_state_of_consciousness

    (n.d.) In Merriam-Webster Dictionary online, 2013). Examples include impact to the brain caused by blunt force (i.e., a car accident). The reason a traumatic experience causes altered states of consciousness is that it changes how the brain works. The external impact diverts the blood flow from the front of the brain to other areas.

  8. Pathoclisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathoclisis

    They defined it as the "genomically-determined excessive variability, reaching in intensity the degree of pathological change". During their work in France and Germany, these prominent scientists of neurological research first experimented on animals, administering pharmalogical agents and using electricity to observe electrical and functional ...

  9. Pathological science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathological_science

    Irving Langmuir coined the phrase pathological science in a talk in 1953.. Pathological science, as defined by Langmuir, is a psychological process in which a scientist, originally conforming to the scientific method, unconsciously veers from that method, and begins a pathological process of wishful data interpretation (see the observer-expectancy effect and cognitive bias).