Archive for May 2014
Book Review: Motivational interviewing. Helping people change
Multisystemic Therapy as an Intervention for Young People on the Edge of Care
The function of wisdom dimensions in ego-identity development among Chinese university students
Nature and Health
Injury Among Children and Young Adults With Epilepsy
Child Socialization Goals in East Asian versus Western Nations from 1989 to 2010: Evidence for Social Change in Parenting
Commentary Introduction: Acquaintance Molestation and Youth-Serving Organizations
A randomized controlled trial of a self-guided internet cognitive behaviour therapy-based course for individuals with fibromyalgia and anxiety and/or depression
My Bad (I Know, Right!)
Attachment and group psychotherapy: Introduction to a special section.
Parent Management Training-Oregon Model (PMTO™) in Mexico City: Integrating Cultural Adaptation Activities in an Implementation Model
Aboriginal child placement principle and family group conferences
Managing the duality: managerial challenges in an ICT-intensive ‘professionalised services’ model
How justice can affect jury: Training abstract words promotes generalisation to concrete words in patients with aphasia
Culture Bound
Decreased plasma neuroactive amino acids and increased nitric oxide levels in melancholic major depressive disorder
Human research ethics committees and ethical review: The changing research culture for social workers
Using accumulated knowledge to calibrate theoretical propositions
Anarchism and sexuality: ethics, relationship and power, by Jamie Heckert and Richard Cleminson
Introduction to the special section on dual-trauma couples.
Alcohol Consumption and Cognitive Performance: a Mendelian Randomisation Study
Chimamanda Adichie
Collusive induction in perverse relating: Perverse enactments and bastions as a camouflage for death anxiety
Mental Health Consequences of Disasters
Rapport Operationalized as a Humanitarian Interview in Investigative Interview Settings
Parental Obesity and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorder
Broca and Charcot’s Research on Jacques Inaudi: The Psychological and Anthropological Study of a Mental Calculator
In the nineteenth century, French scientific institutions became interested in young “mental calculators,” arithmetical prodigies able to quickly and accurately perform complex mental calculations. The first scientists to study mental calculators were phrenologists who sought to prove the existence of a calculating organ in the frontal lobe.