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Artikulacijsko-fonološke sposobnosti djece s cerebralnom paralizom

Artikulacijsko-fonološke sposobnosti djece s cerebralnom paralizom

Author(s): Emica Farago,Draženka Blaži,Martina Vukovic Ogrizek / Language(s): Croatian Issue: 1/2016

The goal of this research was to examine and compare articulation and phonological abilities in children with cerebral palsy and their typically developing peers. An examination was conducted on a sample of 15 children with cerebral palsy and 15 typically developing children. The two groups were equalized by gender and age. The measuring instruments used were the Articulation Test and phonological ability tasks. The data were analysed using the robust discriminative analysis, t-test, chi-square test, as well as the Cohran-Cox test. The results showed a signifycant statistical difference in articulation and phonological abilities between children with cerebral palsy and typically developing children. The difference between the groups is for the most part due to the variables deletion of consonants and number of articulation errors. The variables first voice segregation, phonemic analysis, and rhyme searching are also signifi cant in creating this discriminant function. The results also confirm statistical differences in articulation and phonological abilities that are related to the type of cerebral palsy. A group of children with a spastic type of cerebral palsy was more successful in phoneme analysis, syllable analysis, consonant deletion tasks, and rhyme searching tasks. They also had better articulation abilities.

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Computational model of C. Elegans core olfactory circuit

Author(s): Marek Dobeš / Language(s): English Issue: 1/2015

To understand human brains, it is necessary to understand simpler neural processes first. In the article we provide a core computational model of C. Elegans olfactory circuit. Based on biological experiments presented in the literature, we develop a circuit mimicking some of the features of the biological olfactory circuit of C. Elegans.

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ОГРАНИЧЕНИЕ ДЕЕСПОСОБНОСТИ (ВМЕНЯЕМОСТИ) ЛИЦ, СТРАДАЮЩИХ ПСИХИЧЕСКИМИ РАССТРОЙСТВАМИ: ОТСУТСТВИЕ СИСТЕМНОСТИ НОРМ В РОССИЙСКОМ ПРАВЕ

Author(s): Olga Aleksandrovna Serova / Language(s): Russian Issue: 2/2016

The paper examines the effect of including a statute regarding special disability of persons suffering from mental illness in the Russian civil legislation. Legal enacting of additional criteria for assessing the ability of the citizen to realize the effect of their actions and to control them has great importance for the development of the civil society in Russia. There is a rejection of the concept of insulating treatment of persons suffering from mental disorders. The society is aware of the negative effects of stigmatization of mentally deranged persons. The significance for social adaptation of afflicted persons and their involvement in social processes is recognized. Any restriction of the legal capacity of persons with mental derangement requires a clear definition of the term “assistance of another person”. There is no unique approach to maintain or reduce the family capacity of citizens that are incapacitated. Mental derangement has a significant impact on human behavior in legal relations, legal qualification of actions. To date, the problems of capacity (sanity) are studied separately in civil, administrative, and criminal laws. This leads to gaps in legal regulations, thereby resulting in the lack of unified criteria for evaluating the status of persons with mental disorders. Identification of mental derangement or temporary loss of knowledgeable behavior cannot be a subject of study of one area of law. Implementation of the principle of perpetuation of the legal capacity of citizens with mental derangement should be associated with the research on the degree of awareness of possible social danger that may be caused by their actions. Preventive assessment of the danger represented by persons with mental disorders to surrounding persons is necessary to determine of the degree of control over their own actions.

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Sny, świadomość i jaźń: perspektywa filozoficzna
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Sny, świadomość i jaźń: perspektywa filozoficzna

Author(s): Jennifer M. Windt / Language(s): Polish Issue: 5/2016

This article outlines the state of research on dreams and dreaming. Windt proposes a new structure to describe conscious experiences while dreaming. Building on methodological and theoretical achievements in the natural sciences as well as philosophy, she indicates new directions for the development of a philosophical theory of dreaming and related concepts of dreaming, wakefulness and consciousness. Windt discusses the phenomenology of dreaming as well as the relations between the sleeping physical body and the sleeping ‘I’. This allows her to explore alternative states of consciousness and their relationship to dreams and dreaming.

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Is Syntactic Working Memory Language Specific?

Author(s): Vanja Kljajević / Language(s): English Issue: 1/2010

One question that has emerged from recent studies on sentence processing pertains to the nature of a specific cognitive mechanism implicated in maintenance of unintegrated syntactic information in ongoing sentence processing. In addition to evidence from language, recent research on musical syntax has suggested that processing of musical sequences may require a similar cognitive mechanism. In this paper evidence is discussed for the implication of syntactic working memory (SWM) in processing of language and musical syntax, arithmetic sequences, as well as in complex motor movements used with a specific expressive purpose. The idea is that an anticipatory structure-building component governs interpretation in each of these domains by processing relevant integrations within sequences of structurally dependent elements. The concept of SWM is anchored in representational modularity and the shared syntactic integration resources hypothesis, and empirically supported by neurophysiological and neuroimaging evidence.

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“No amount of serotonin will bring Darcy to the door.”
Understanding mental illness in contemporary autobiographical writing in English

“No amount of serotonin will bring Darcy to the door.” Understanding mental illness in contemporary autobiographical writing in English

Author(s): Katarzyna Szmigiero / Language(s): English Issue: 28/2017

Autobiographic writing about the experience of illness is becoming increasingly popular in English-language literature. Among many subjects addressed in patographies, the origin and treatment of mental disorders is a recurrent theme. Authors who have received a psychiatric diagnosis analyse the nature of their mental suffering, attributing it to biology, upbringing, traumatic life events or cultural stressors. Their opinions make an important contribution to contemporary discussions about mental health issues, gender roles and medicalisation of everyday life.The aim of this article is to present various approaches to mental illness and the brain-mind dichotomy voiced in many narratives. Although contemporary psychiatry tends to see mental disorders as brain diseases, some patients find this view reductionist as it robs them of agency. Others, on the other hand, support the biomedical model of madness and seem fascinated with neurological and biochemical explanations of their own moods and emotions. The third group comprises individuals who try to find an eclectic explanation, combining biology and socio-cultural factors.

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Being her own biographer – Su Meck’s memoir I Forgot to Remember and the fallibility of memory from the perspective of neuroscience and cognitive psychology

Being her own biographer – Su Meck’s memoir I Forgot to Remember and the fallibility of memory from the perspective of neuroscience and cognitive psychology

Author(s): Anita Jarczok / Language(s): English Issue: 28/2017

Su Meck’s memoir relates her loss of memory as a result of the brain injury that she suffered when a kitchen fan fell on her head. Meck never recovered her memories from before the incident, and for some time after it she was also unable to form any new memories. In this dramatic account of the loss of memory, Meck tries to understand her experiences and to rebuild her sense of self. I describe the dire consequences of such a total memory failure, especially to our sense of self. However, I also argue that this memoir is about the fallibility of memory in general, not only in such an extreme case as the brain injury. Trying to reconstruct her story, Meck discovers that others have either incomplete or conflicting stories to tell her. I Forgot to Remember brings the transient and biased nature of our own memories into sharp focus. However, Meck’s narrative not only exposes the limitation of our memory and highlights its importance to our sense of self but also brings to light the fluid boundaries of various life writing genres and reveals the pitfalls of placing too much emphasis on memory in relation to self.

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Use of the Penn state worry questionnaire to identify individuals with gad: an Indian perspective

Use of the Penn state worry questionnaire to identify individuals with gad: an Indian perspective

Author(s): K. Chhibber,S. Parikh / Language(s): English Issue: 5/2016

Background and Objectives: The Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) has been established as an efficacious tool to identify individuals with Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) as against those with other anxiety disorders. We report on the use of the PSWQ in the Indian population to identify individuals with GAD. Methods: 30 individuals with GAD and 60 with other anxiety disorders without GAD completed the PSWQ. Results: Using the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve analysis, a score of 64, which optimized both sensitivity and specificity, was found to discriminate between individuals with GAD and those with other anxiety disorders without GAD. Limitations: The study conducted on a small sample would benefit from further research to establish the PSWQ as an efficacious tool for identify individuals with GAD. Conclusion: Results from the current study offer strong support for the use of the PSWQ for initial screening and identification of individuals with GAD who present for treatment for anxiety disorders.

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EMOTIONAL RELEASE INTERVENTIONS FOR STRESS REDUCTION: ADAPTATIONS FOR DIFFERENT MULTICULTURAL CONTEXTS

EMOTIONAL RELEASE INTERVENTIONS FOR STRESS REDUCTION: ADAPTATIONS FOR DIFFERENT MULTICULTURAL CONTEXTS

Author(s): Iulian Zonenstain / Language(s): Romanian Issue: 39/2024

In an increasingly diverse world, stress is a common issue affecting individuals across various cultures. This paper explores how emotional release techniques can be adapted to meet cultural specifics, aiming to enhance their effectiveness in reducing stress and promoting emotional well-being. Cultural differences in the perception and management of stress are discussed, highlighting cultural barriers that may influence the application of emotional release techniques. The study integrates multicultural perspectives and proposes adaptations to these techniques to respect and leverage cultural diversity, thereby promoting more relevant and accepted therapeutic interventions.

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Treatment of speech difficulties and body tics secondary to childhood sexual trauma through a combination of hypnotic age regression and therapeutic coaching: a case report

Treatment of speech difficulties and body tics secondary to childhood sexual trauma through a combination of hypnotic age regression and therapeutic coaching: a case report

Author(s): Joseph Tramontana / Language(s): English Issue: 4/2015

For years, when describing his therapeutic use of hypnosis to individual clients or in various presentations to professionals, the present author has referred to hypnosis as a “tool through which therapeutic change can be enhanced.” One such presentation was titled “Hypnosis as an Adjunct to Psychotherapy”. In his book on hypnotically enhanced treatment for addictions and various CEU workshops to ASCH and other groups 3‒6 on addictions, and more recently one specifically on treatment for gambling addiction, he stressed that many therapies could be enhanced when presented hypnotically. Examples include cognitive behavioral approaches (CBT);8 Yapko9 described treatment of depression integrating CBT and hypnosis. CBT, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), 12-step programs, healing the wounded child within, and others have been utilized in combination with hypnosis by the present author. One publication combining hypnosis with other therapies is titled “Hypnotic systematic desensitization”. In an article on hypnotic approaches to chronic pain management, Jensen and Patterson referred to a meta-analysis by Kirsch et al., They referred to “the additive effects of hypnosis” when combined with other treatments.

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LIJEČITI OVISNOST ZNAČI LIJEČITI CJELOKUPNO LJUDSKO BIĆE, JER JE OVISNOST PREKOMPLEKSNA DA BI SE SAMO ZDRAVSTVENE USTANOVE BORILE S NJOM

LIJEČITI OVISNOST ZNAČI LIJEČITI CJELOKUPNO LJUDSKO BIĆE, JER JE OVISNOST PREKOMPLEKSNA DA BI SE SAMO ZDRAVSTVENE USTANOVE BORILE S NJOM

Author(s): Elvedin Subašić / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 99/2024

Interview with Mevludin Joldić, by Elvedin Subašić.

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TEACHERS' VIEWS OF ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT AND COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT OF STUDENTS WITH HIGH-FUNCTIONING AUTISM

TEACHERS' VIEWS OF ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT AND COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT OF STUDENTS WITH HIGH-FUNCTIONING AUTISM

Author(s): Natasha Stanojkovska-Trajkovska,Brankica Angelevska / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2024

High-functioning autism is a pervasive developmental disorder whose prevalence is increasing nowadays. That opens the question about the success in the academic achievements of the students with high-functioning autism and the influence it has in their inclusion in all the aspects of everyday life. Research carried out in this field, shows that the students with high-functioning autism in all-inclusive schools achieve better academic success and therefore it is easier for them to adapt in the environment. The purpose of this research is to determine whether the inclusion, the awareness of the educators in the course of teaching the students with high-functioning autism and the collaboration with the special educators and parents, would benefit the improvement of the academic success. The research was carried out in all the elementary, secondary, public and private schools in the city of Skopje, including 115 participants throughout the period of one year. The results show that high-functioning autism students do not achieve the expected academic results throughout all the parts of education and they are not completely integrated in the community. According to the results of our research, we can conclude that even though our country provides complete inclusion of the students with high-functioning autism, the necessary conditions are not yet met to enable improvement in academic achievement and integration in society. The research was conducted with support of Questionnaire for assessing the awareness and attitudes of teachers about the academic achievement and inclusion in the community of persons with high-functioning autism and Asperger Test for Children. The interview technique was also carried out with some of the teachers from the mentioned schools.

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Cultural Anthropology And Cognitive Science: Mapping The Environment

Cultural Anthropology And Cognitive Science: Mapping The Environment

Author(s): Jelena Ćuković / Language(s): English Issue: 1/2024

Cognitive sciences have initiated the revolution in the interdisciplinarity of the research of the human mind, but cultural anthropology as one of the founding disciplines has gradually withdrawn from this group. The reasons for this are manifold, butthe space emptied by anthropology has since then remained as such, or has been filled with predominantly psychological content or the content of cultural neuroscience. In recent years, developments in psychology, neuroscience and AI studies (shifts to constructivism) have led to a renewed call for anthropology to contribute its findings to an interdisciplinary understanding of the human mind and cognition through culture. This shift is evident in the field of environmental and space perception, which is pivotalfor the understanding of the concept of reality. The aim of the paper is to present findings of the comparative analysis of classical anthropological theories and emerging theories in other cognitive disciplines regarding this topic, especially in neuroscience.The broader goal is to emphasize the importance of re-evaluating our categories of scientific disciplines and the separation of nature and culture as a distinguishing feature, and also to begin to fill the gap in the anthropological literature on this topic that hasexisted for almost a decade.

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Experimental Design and Technical Tools for the Research of Musical Stimuli with Artificially Implemented Complexity Used in the Rehabilitation of Alzheimer's Disease Patients

Experimental Design and Technical Tools for the Research of Musical Stimuli with Artificially Implemented Complexity Used in the Rehabilitation of Alzheimer's Disease Patients

Author(s): Lenka Dohnalová,Tomáš Fürst / Language(s): English Issue: 1/2017

This study focuses on identifying new and effective rehabilitation strategies for patients with Alzheimer's disease, which relies on the empirically confirmed effect of musical stimuli. The strategies were inspired by studies of new rehabilitation methods designed by Nicholas Stergiou (Biomechanics Lab, University of Nebraska in Omaha), based on signals that contain artificially incorporated physiological complexity (e.g. pink noise). The physiological signals of a healthy organism contain a certain degree of such complexity. The first phase of the research includes the creation of software in a MIDI format, which enabled the implementation of this complexity into recordings of classical music, and its piloting on a "healthy" population. The following phase will examine the effects of these recordings on patients with AD (in collaboration with neurologists in diagnostics).

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The Effect of Meditation and Psychotherapy in Changing the Personality Traits of the Adults

The Effect of Meditation and Psychotherapy in Changing the Personality Traits of the Adults

Author(s): Maria Nicoleta Mocanu / Language(s): English Issue: 88/2025

Meditation and mindfulness may mediate emotion regulation and this has an impact on the social behaviour of the adult. The sample was composed of 24 adults, 12 males and 12 females, aged between 22 and 44 years old, with an average age of 29 years old. The group of experiment (6 males and 6 females), participated in the group sessions between May 2023 – February 2024, whereas the control group (6 males and 6 females) did not participate in the group sessions. For all dimensions of the personality traits studied higher results were obtained in the retest for the experimental group, compared to the control group, which confirmed our hypothesis that meditation and integrative group sessions can improve personality traits of the adults. Combining meditation with psychotherapy can significantly change the adult's personality traits. This concludes that adult's neuroflexibility can be therapeutically trained, which is of great importance for patients with psychiatric disorders and neurodegenerative disorders. Also, for individuals without psychopathology this points to the fact that personality traits are flexible no matter the age and as a result social behaviour and adaptability can be improved in adulthood.

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Processing of unaccusative structures in people with aphasia and healthy population

Processing of unaccusative structures in people with aphasia and healthy population

Author(s): Nermina Čordalija / Language(s): English Issue: 7/2023

This paper provides an overview of several studies that investigated processing of unaccusative structures in populations of people with aphasia (PWA) and healthy speakers. Unaccusative structures are known to be notoriously difficult for patients with Broca’s aphasia. In the paper, we address seminal works that proposed The Argument Structure Complexity Hypothesis and The Derived Order Problem Hypothesis to account for the deficits that occur in the production of unaccusative structures in Broca’s aphasia that is characterised by slow and effortful speech. We also refer to studies that explored processing of unaccusative structures in healthy populations. These studies reveal that the moved unaccusative subject is stored in the working memory until the parser reaches the sentence position where the unaccusative argument was merged and then it is reconstructed at that position. We also address the interplay between unaccusativity and the category of aspect that was investigated in some experimental studies. Finally, the paper provides directions for future research in L1 and L2 processing to build upon the state of the art on unaccusativity.

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Model uspješnog uključivanja korisnika usluga u mentalnom zdravlju i njihovih porodica u proces oporavka: Preliminarni rezultati studije IMPULSE

Model uspješnog uključivanja korisnika usluga u mentalnom zdravlju i njihovih porodica u proces oporavka: Preliminarni rezultati studije IMPULSE

Author(s): Remzija Šetić,Tihana Majstorović,Mina Aleksić,Mirjana Zebić / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 6/2020

The IMPULSE study, led by Queen Mary University of London, offers a unique opportunity to radically improve care for people with psychotic disorders in lowand middle-income countries in Southeast Europe. One of the goals of the study is to include mental health service users and their families in the recovery process. Involvement is based on (a) forming of advisory bodies of users and families that monitor and direct the steps in the project, and (b) the development of a model of user led associations, in which professionals and users of mental health services manage the association and develop it together. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Menssana Association is included in the study as a model for user - led association, and the study is also being conducted in Serbia, Montenegro, Northern Macedonia and Kosovo. The aim of this paper is to present the preliminary results of the IMPULSE study on the analysis of the characteristics of user-led associations, internal organization, capacity, challenges and the role of users in the association. In addition to what was stated, we aim to compare the previously mentioned characteristics of associations of health service users that are not primarily related to mental health problems. This goal is set in order to better understand the challenges that associations face and the perspectives for their future development. The results confirmed the correctness of the basic idea that people living with problem health are the best source of information and the best advocates of their rights in society, and with adequate help from professionals and volunteers, adequate and long-lasting activities of the association are ensured. We have gained significant insight into the functioning of user associations in the region. We determined the best model of action for the user-led association.

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Anksiozna osjetljivost i suicidalnost kod osoba sa ptsp-om: pregled istraživanja

Anksiozna osjetljivost i suicidalnost kod osoba sa ptsp-om: pregled istraživanja

Author(s): Zana Aziraj,Vildana Aziraj-Smajić / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 4/2017

The goal of this article is to explain the nature of the relation between anxiety sensitivity (AS) and suicidality among people with PTSD and reveal the mechanisms that lie in the background of that relation. Present studies reveal that people with PTSD who are having increased AS more often report the presence of suicidal ideas and suicide attempts. Cognitive concerns as elementary determinants are shown to be a significant predictor of suicide risk among people with PTSD. Also, they are significant predictors of suicide risk among people with depressive disorder, and it is possible that anxiety sensitivity will be a stronger predictor of suicide risk in comorbidity. Further, it is shown that the best predictor of suicidality among persons with PTSD are high cognitive concerns in interaction with low physical concerns. Consistent with research results clinical implications suggest a significant role for the treatment of cognitive concerns in reducing PTSD symptoms and suicidal ideas. According to this information, it can be concluded that anxiety sensitivity can be a strong predictor of suicidality among persons with PTSD, and therefore it should be an important part of treatment.

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Suicidalnost i ptsp: pregled dosadašnjih spoznaja o ulozi komorbidnih psihičkih poremećaja

Suicidalnost i ptsp: pregled dosadašnjih spoznaja o ulozi komorbidnih psihičkih poremećaja

Author(s): Vildana Aziraj-Smajić,Zana Aziraj / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 4/2017

The purpose of this article is to give a comprehensive overview of the role of comorbidity in suicide risk among people with PTSD. Based on recent studies, there is strong evidence about the cohesion between suicidality and PTSD, especially when there is comorbidity with another psychological disease inherent. Comorbidity with Disruptive Mood Dysregulation is found to be the most signifcant predictor of suicidality among people with PTSD. The risk of suicidality is also increased with comorbidity with Substance Related and Addictive disorders. Also, it is found that comorbidity with Addictive and Psychotic disorders, mostly disorders from the schizophrenia spectrum, significantly increase suicide risk among people with PTSD. Further, it is found that comorbidity with Borderline Personality Disorder is strongest among comorbidity with Personality disorders in predicting suicide risk among people with PTSD. The clinical implications of this article are relevant to the possibility of practical use of scientifically based research results, and their use in clinical practice with the goal of improving the psychological evaluation of suicidality.

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Silent Witnesses: Micro-Historical Perspectives on Suicide in the Court Records of the First Half of the 20th Century

Silent Witnesses: Micro-Historical Perspectives on Suicide in the Court Records of the First Half of the 20th Century

Author(s): Meta Remec / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2024

Based on the archival materials from the Celje and Maribor District Courts (Kreisgerichte) and the specific cases from the Trbovlje County Court (Bezirksgericht), referring to the areas with the highest suicide rates in the Drava Banate, this article examines suicide in the first half of the 20th century. Based on individual cases from judicial practice, as well as newspaper reports, the article sheds light on the social, economic and regional conditions in the considered areas in the first half of the 20th century, as well as the position of women in society and the prevalence of family and sexual violence. At the time when the increasing suicide rates were attributed to the aftermath of World War I, the effects of the economic crisis, and alcoholism, the article analyses the presence and gradual dominance of psychological and psychiatric discourse in determining the causes of individual suicides. By analysing the individual cases, the author presents the attitude towards suicide in rural areas – the shame and stigma still felt by the family members when a relative of theirs commits suicide. The author analyses cases where either the suicide could not be identified or when the corps of the deceased was not found, as well as cases of suicide due to fear and/or shame due to crimes committed. Furthermore, the article focuses on the phenomenon of female suicide and, in this context, on the examples of murder-suicide and the role of women in them, analyses the contemporaneous media discourse, and describes the course of the investigations in the cases where it was not clear whether the death had resulted from suicide or murder.

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