What's the point of neuropsychoanalysis?
Abstract
Neuropsychoanalysis is a new school of thought attempting to bridge neuroscience and psychoanalysis. Yet few neuroscientists and psychiatrists would have heard of it if it had not recently received public support from notable neuroscientists. The present paper discusses whether such support is warranted.
- Royal College of Psychiatrists
This Month's Issue
Viewed
- Psychiatric effects of cannabis
- Cycle of child sexual abuse: links between being a victim and becoming a perpetrator
- Factors influencing the decision to use hanging as a method of suicide: qualitative study
- The distinction between personality disorder and mental illness
- Pharmacology and effects of cannabis: a brief review
Cited
- A new depression scale designed to be sensitive to change
- A new clinical scale for the staging of dementia
- Detection of postnatal depression. Development of the 10-item Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale
- The Association Between Quantitative Measures of Dementia and of Senile Change in the Cerebral Grey Matter of Elderly Subjects
- CAMDEX. A standardised instrument for the diagnosis of mental disorder in the elderly with special reference to the early detection of dementia
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