Archive for November 2012
How to practise Bayesian statistics outside the Bayesian church: What philosophy for Bayesian statistical modelling?
Clustering of drinker prototype characteristics: What characterizes the typical drinker?
Recognition by association: Within- and cross-modality associative priming with faces and voices
Confirmation biases across the psychosis continuum: The contribution of hypersalient evidence-hypothesis matches
Why self-critical patients present with more severe eating disorder pathology: The mediating role of shame
Beliefs about medicine and illness are associated with fear of cancer recurrence in women taking adjuvant endocrine therapy for breast cancer
The Portuguese formal social support for autonomy and dependence in pain inventory (FSSADI_PAIN): A preliminary validation study
Child Abuse in Irish Catholic Settings: A Non-Reductionist Account
Safeguarding Children from Emotional Maltreatment. What Works by Jane Barlow and Anita Schrader McMillan, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, 2010. 174pp. ISBN 978-1-84905-053-1 (pbk)
The empirically supported status of acceptance and commitment therapy: An update
Reviewers for Clinical Psychologist, Volume 16, 2012
Towards a Taxonomy of Common Factors in Psychotherapy—Results of an Expert Survey
Exploring the Psychological Processes Underlying Touch: Lessons from the Alexander Technique
The Missing Link: A Call for More Rigorous PTSD Assessment Procedures
Mechanisms Underlying Sexual Violence Exposure and Psychosocial Sequelae: A Theoretical and Empirical Review
Unhealthy Weight-control Behaviours, Dieting and Weight Status: A Cross-cultural Comparison between North American and Spanish Adolescents
Comparison of DSM-IV Versus Proposed DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria for Eating Disorders in a Japanese Sample
Cathy Urwin 1949–2012
Is uncertainty bad for you? It depends
Academic expectations and well-being from school to work during the economic downturn
Balls Enough: Manliness and Legitimated Violence in Hell’s Kitchen
Heroes and Matriarchs’: Working-Class Femininities, Violence and Door Supervision Work
Supporting housing and neighbourhoods for healthy ageing: Findings from the Housing and Independent Living Study (HAIL)
General practitioner service provision in residential aged care facilities: 1998–2011
Lost in transition: setting the psychosis threshold in prodromal research
Psychopathological long-term outcome of schizophrenia – a review
The Romantic Realism of Michel Foucault The Scientific Temptation
Updated Slide Set: HIV Surveillance by Race/Ethnicity (through 2010)
Exploring motivation for exercise and its relationship with health-related quality of life in adults aged 70 years and older
Evaluation of a real-time virtual intervention to empower persons living with HIV to use therapy self-management: study protocol for an online randomized controlled trial
Statistics on NHS Stop Smoking Services: England, April 2012 to June 2012
Key Facts
• 176,945 people set a quit date through NHS Stop Smoking Services, a decrease of 17% (35,363) on the final figure for same period in 2011/12 (212,308), and an decrease of 7% (13,473) on the final figure for the same period in 2010/11 (190,418).
• At the 4 week follow-up 86,341 people had successfully quit (based on self-report), 49% of those setting a quit date. This is a decrease of 15% (15,214) on the final figure for the same period in 2011/12 (101,555), and also a decrease of 3% (3,074) on the final figure for the same period in 2010/11 (89,415).
The Effect of Youth Diversion Programs on Recidivism: A Meta-Analytic Review
Federal Health Reform Is Largely Market-Based, Despite Contrary Assertions
Art therapy for personality disorder: 2012 UK professional consensus guidelines, development process and outcome
The right to practice medicine without repercussions: ethical issues in times of political strife
Using an Internet Survey to Improve Patient Adherence in Chronic Disease
Freud’s social theory: Modernist and postmodernist revisions
Acknowledging the power of the id-drives, Freud held on to the authority of reason as the ego’s best tool to control instinctual desire. He thereby placed analytic reason at the foundation of his own ambivalent social theory, which, on the one hand, held utopian promise based upon psychoanalytic insight, and, on the other hand, despaired of reason’s capacity to control the self-destructive elements of the psyche.