The New View of Self: How Genes and Neurotransmitters Shape Your Mind, Your Personality, and Your Mental HealthWritten by distinguished psychiatrist Dr. Larry Siever and based on his years of leading-edge research at such pioneering institutions as the National Institute of Mental Health and Mount Sinai Medical Center, the book details the ways in which science has attempted to define and treat brain disorders through the ages. It examines the longtime scientific focus on studying the amount of neurotransmitters released (such as the much-publicized dopamine and serotonin) and explains why scientists need to shift their attention to examining the ways in which neurotransmitters work in order to gain a clearer understanding of the brain's dysfunctional mechanisms. Groundbreaking in its implications, The New View of Self compellingly demonstrates the ways in which both environmental stresses and inherited tendencies contribute to psychological problems. It effectively silences the long-standing debates over "talk therapies" or "drug therapies", affirming that both types of therapy are needed to resolve mental-health disorders. Examples of Dr. Siever's landmark research and fascinating case studies illuminate the text and highlight the various disorders and their treatments. |
Common terms and phrases
abnormalities abuse activity affective disorder aggression amphetamine antidepressants antisocial anxiety disorders become behavior biological blood borderline personality disorder brain catecholamine cause changes chemical child chronic clinical clonidine cognitive cortisol depressed patients develop diabetes disease dopamine dramatic cluster drugs dysregulated effects emotional environment environmental episodes experience factors fear feel fenfluramine frontal lobe function genes genetic histrionic hormone illness impulsive increased inhibition insulin interaction Jack Jerry Julia less levels mania manic depressive Martin and Susan medication mental mood Nancy's narcissistic nervous system neurochemical neuroleptic neurons neurotransmitter neurotransmitter systems NIMH noradrenergic norepinephrine normal obsessive-compulsive obsessive-compulsive disorder panic disorder parents pattern problems prolactin prolactin response psychiatric disorders psychotic PTSD receptors relationship role schizoid personality disorder schizophrenia schizophrenic patients sense sensitive serotonergic serotonin system social sometimes specific stress studies suggests susceptibility symptoms synapse thought tion traits treatment twins tyramine
References to this book
The Best-laid Plans: Health Care's Problems and Prospects Lawrie McFarlane,C. G. Prado Limited preview - 2002 |