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Withtherecentlyperceivedincreaseinincidenceofautismandtherealizationthat
"autism"mayactuallybe"autisms"withsubsetsofaffectedindividuals,researchers
have been pursuing the possibility that there may be multiple
etiologies for the
disorder.Althoughmostautismstudieshavefocusedongeneticsandadvancedn-
roimaging,thereisapaucityofresearchaimedatdeterminingtheneurochemical
basisofautism.Identifyingcoreneuralsubstratesorkeybiomarkersisessentialto
understandingthemechanisticbasisthatmayinpartunderlie"autisms."Alterations
inmolecules,proteins,receptors,andsynapticelementsaresomeofthecontrib-
ingsubstratesthatcouldresultinaltereddevelopmentalprocesses,changedsynaptic
function,andaberrationsinconnectivity.Itisnowapparentthatmultiplebrainareas
are affected in autism, and neuropathological defects have been
described within
corticalandsubcorticalnetworks.Althoughrecentprogresshasbeenmadeinid-
tifyingsomeofthegenesthatmayunderliethedisorder,muchattentionhasalso
beengiventoepigeneticand/orenvironmentalfactorsthatmaycontributetosubsets
ofautisticindividuals. The contributors to this book were hand
selected because of their expertise in their respective ?elds.
Individually each chapter presents a unique perspective into the
clinical, developmental, neurochemical, and/or physical chemical
basis of autism. The contributing authors summarize current
research ?ndings in their respective areas and also present novel
ideas and propose hypotheses and p- sible mechanisms that may be
operative during development and the potential
consequencesofhavingdefectsinspeci?cmolecules,receptors,orgenes.
Thesubtitle"FromMoleculestoMinicolumns"wasinsertedbecauseofmuch
recent attention given to alterations in the basic organization of
mini- or mic- columns of neurons in cerebral cortical areas in
autism. These especially include
prefrontalcorticalareasthatundergoanovergrowthduringearlypostnataldevel-
mentinmanyindividualswithautism.Tothisend,theworldrenownedDr.Alan
Peters,theneuroanatomistthatoriginallydescribedmini-ormicro-columnaror-
nizationinthecerebralcortex,wasrecruitedtowriteachapterinthisbookgiving
hisexpertperspectiveontheissueinautism. The book begins with highly
respected clinician, Dr. Margaret L. Bauman,
DirectoroftheLADDERSclinicintheBostonarea,withaclinicalandmedicalp-
spectiveofautismdiscussingetiologies,clinicalpresentation,earlyidenti?cation,
vii viii Preface advancementsinmedicalcare,andassociateddisorders.
Inthechapter"TheMale Prevalence in Autism Spectrum Disorders:
Hypotheses on its Neurobiological
Basis",ItalianresearchersDrs.FlavioKellerandLilianaRutapresentneuroch-
ical hypotheses as the basis for the predominance of male
prevalence in autism discussing the possible roles of estrogen,
testosterone, oxytocin, and vasopressin in the organization of
brain circuits and hemispheric specialization. Psychiatrist Dr.
Ricardo Vella relates neuropathologies in autism, in the limbic and
cereb- lar regions, to speci?c behaviors and presents a
developmental perspective and hypotheses regarding emotional and
attachment behaviors in autistic individuals.
Analytics - Business Intelligence, Algorithms and Statistical
Analysis In today's world, analysis has become an extremely
important aspect to consider when you are thinking of starting any
new line of business or even when it comes to purchasing a new
house. The unfortunate fact is that not many people know what
analysis is all about. They tend to assume that each of the
elements - analysis, business intelligence, algorithms and
statistical analysis - are different entities when in reality they
are all interlinked. This book will help you gather a greater
insight on all the elements. And you will gain an in-depth
knowledge on each of these elements in different parts of the book;
helping you to increase your knowledge and widen your horizons!
The main focus of this monograph is synthesizing the importance of
geographic approaches to public health and patient care. The
chapters are organized into four themed sections: the role of
geography in health care reform; the geographies of human health;
geospatial data and technologies; and geography in medicine. It is
a highly informative book, providing scientific insight for
geographers with an interest in advanced geospatial applications
and health research. The author is an international expert in
geography, GIS, and public health, who co-edited a special issue on
"Geospatial Applications in Disease Surveillance," published in the
International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research. "Health,
Science, and Place is a well-intentioned overview of medical
geography in the context of the ACA. Blatt does an excellent job
synthesizing ecologic and geographic literatures with what we know
about individual health, health care systems, and public health.
... this book fills a need in the field by offering a timely
discussion of the ACA and medical geography." - Jennifer L. Moss,
The AAG Review of Books, Vol. 4 (2), 2016 "Amy Blatt's pioneering
new book on geomedicine and its exciting capacity to promote health
and minimize risk is a robust call for understanding the role of
geography for everyone's quality of life. In Health, Science, and
Place: A New Mode, Dr. Blatt's contributions can be summarized in
three categories: comprehensive analysis, creative curating, and
targeted innovations... Overall, Dr. Blatt's Health, Science, and
Place: A New Model is a pathbreaking book challenging all public
health and health communication scholars and practitioners to
explore vigorously the role of medical geography as a shining new
bridge between geography and patient care." - John C. Pollock, PhD,
MPA, Professor of Health Communication and Human Rights, and
Faculty Affiliate in Public Health, The College of New Jersey,
Ewing, NJ
The papers featured in "Attachment and Sexuality "create a dense
tapestry, each forming a separate narrative strand that elucidates
different configurations of the relationship between attachment and
sexuality. As a whole, the volume explores the areas of convergence
and divergence, opposition, and integration between these two
systems. It suggests that there is a bi-directional web of
influences that weaves the attachment and sexual systems together
in increasingly complex ways from infancy to adulthood.
The volume's unifying thread is the idea that the attachment
system, and particularly the degree of felt security, or lack
thereof in relation to early attachment figures, provides a
paradigm of relatedness that forms a scaffold for the developmental
unfolding of sexuality in all its manifestations. Such
manifestations include infantile and adult, masturbatory and
mutual, and normative and perverse. Also central to the papers is
the idea that the development of secure attachment is predicated,
in part, on the development of the capacity for mentalization, or
the ability to envision and interpret the behavior of oneself and
others in terms of intentional mental states, including desires,
feelings, beliefs, and motivations. Topics discussed in the book
will help to shape the direction and tenor of further dialogues in
the arena of attachment and sexuality.
Dynamic psychotherapy research has become revitalized, especially
in the last three decades. This major study by Sidney Blatt,
Richard Ford, and their associates evaluates long-term intensive
treatment (hospital ization and 4-times-a-week psychotherapy) of
very disturbed patients at the Austen Riggs Center. The center
provides a felicitous setting for recovery-beautiful buildings on
lovely wooded grounds just off the quiet main street of the New
England town of Stockbridge, Massa chusetts. The center, which has
been headed in succession by such capable leaders as Robert Knight,
Otto Will, Daniel Schwartz, and now Edward Shapiro, has been well
known for decades for its type of inten sive hospitalization and
psychotherapy. Included in its staff have been such illustrious
contributors as Erik Erikson, David Rapaport, George Klein, and
Margaret Brenman. The Rapaport-Klein study group has been meeting
there yearly since Rapaport's death in 1960. Although the center is
a long-term care treatment facility, it remains successful and
solvent even in these days of increasingly short-term treatment.
Sidney Blatt, Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at Yale Univer
sity, and Richard Ford of the Austen Riggs Center, and their
associates assembled a sample of 90 patients who had been in
long-term treatment and who had been given (initially and at 15
months) a set of psychologi cal tests, including the Rorschach, the
Thematic Apperception Test, a form of the Wechsler Intelligence
Test, and the Human Figure Drawings."
The papers featured in Attachment and Sexuality create a dense
tapestry, each forming a separate narrative strand that elucidates
different configurations of the relationship between attachment and
sexuality. As a whole, the volume explores the areas of convergence
and divergence, opposition, and integration between these two
systems. It suggests that there is a bi-directional web of
influences that weaves the attachment and sexual systems together
in increasingly complex ways from infancy to adulthood. The
volume's unifying thread is the idea that the attachment system,
and particularly the degree of felt security, or lack thereof in
relation to early attachment figures, provides a paradigm of
relatedness that forms a scaffold for the developmental unfolding
of sexuality in all its manifestations. Such manifestations include
infantile and adult, masturbatory and mutual, and normative and
perverse. Also central to the papers is the idea that the
development of secure attachment is predicated, in part, on the
development of the capacity for mentalization, or the ability to
envision and interpret the behavior of oneself and others in terms
of intentional mental states, including desires, feelings, beliefs,
and motivations. Topics discussed in the book will help to shape
the direction and tenor of further dialogues in the arena of
attachment and sexuality.
Examines theoretical aspects of attachment research and
psychoanalysis. Topics covered include similarities and differences
between psychoanalytic and attachment theories, the development of
caregiving, and the two-person unconscious.
First published in 1999. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor and
Francis, an informa company.
Recent research indicates that depression, once believed to be
relatively benign, is highly recurrent and does not respond well to
treatment. The goal of this book is to facilitate the development
of more encompassing theories and more effective treatments for
this disabling disorder by fostering dialogue and enhancing the
integration of work across the boundaries of separate fields.
The main focus of this monograph is synthesizing the importance of
geographic approaches to public health and patient care. The
chapters are organized into four themed sections: the role of
geography in health care reform; the geographies of human health;
geospatial data and technologies; and geography in medicine. It is
a highly informative book, providing scientific insight for
geographers with an interest in advanced geospatial applications
and health research. The author is an international expert in
geography, GIS, and public health, who co-edited a special issue on
"Geospatial Applications in Disease Surveillance," published in the
International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research. "Health,
Science, and Place is a well-intentioned overview of medical
geography in the context of the ACA. Blatt does an excellent job
synthesizing ecologic and geographic literatures with what we know
about individual health, health care systems, and public health.
... this book fills a need in the field by offering a timely
discussion of the ACA and medical geography." - Jennifer L. Moss,
The AAG Review of Books, Vol. 4 (2), 2016 "Amy Blatt's pioneering
new book on geomedicine and its exciting capacity to promote health
and minimize risk is a robust call for understanding the role of
geography for everyone's quality of life. In Health, Science, and
Place: A New Mode, Dr. Blatt's contributions can be summarized in
three categories: comprehensive analysis, creative curating, and
targeted innovations... Overall, Dr. Blatt's Health, Science, and
Place: A New Model is a pathbreaking book challenging all public
health and health communication scholars and practitioners to
explore vigorously the role of medical geography as a shining new
bridge between geography and patient care." - John C. Pollock, PhD,
MPA, Professor of Health Communication and Human Rights, and
Faculty Affiliate in Public Health, The College of New Jersey,
Ewing, NJ
Withtherecentlyperceivedincreaseinincidenceofautismandtherealizationthat
"autism"mayactuallybe"autisms"withsubsetsofaffectedindividuals,researchers
have been pursuing the possibility that there may be multiple
etiologies for the
disorder.Althoughmostautismstudieshavefocusedongeneticsandadvancedn-
roimaging,thereisapaucityofresearchaimedatdeterminingtheneurochemical
basisofautism.Identifyingcoreneuralsubstratesorkeybiomarkersisessentialto
understandingthemechanisticbasisthatmayinpartunderlie"autisms."Alterations
inmolecules,proteins,receptors,andsynapticelementsaresomeofthecontrib-
ingsubstratesthatcouldresultinaltereddevelopmentalprocesses,changedsynaptic
function,andaberrationsinconnectivity.Itisnowapparentthatmultiplebrainareas
are affected in autism, and neuropathological defects have been
described within
corticalandsubcorticalnetworks.Althoughrecentprogresshasbeenmadeinid-
tifyingsomeofthegenesthatmayunderliethedisorder,muchattentionhasalso
beengiventoepigeneticand/orenvironmentalfactorsthatmaycontributetosubsets
ofautisticindividuals. The contributors to this book were hand
selected because of their expertise in their respective ?elds.
Individually each chapter presents a unique perspective into the
clinical, developmental, neurochemical, and/or physical chemical
basis of autism. The contributing authors summarize current
research ?ndings in their respective areas and also present novel
ideas and propose hypotheses and p- sible mechanisms that may be
operative during development and the potential
consequencesofhavingdefectsinspeci?cmolecules,receptors,orgenes.
Thesubtitle"FromMoleculestoMinicolumns"wasinsertedbecauseofmuch
recent attention given to alterations in the basic organization of
mini- or mic- columns of neurons in cerebral cortical areas in
autism. These especially include
prefrontalcorticalareasthatundergoanovergrowthduringearlypostnataldevel-
mentinmanyindividualswithautism.Tothisend,theworldrenownedDr.Alan
Peters,theneuroanatomistthatoriginallydescribedmini-ormicro-columnaror-
nizationinthecerebralcortex,wasrecruitedtowriteachapterinthisbookgiving
hisexpertperspectiveontheissueinautism. The book begins with highly
respected clinician, Dr. Margaret L. Bauman,
DirectoroftheLADDERSclinicintheBostonarea,withaclinicalandmedicalp-
spectiveofautismdiscussingetiologies,clinicalpresentation,earlyidenti?cation,
vii viii Preface advancementsinmedicalcare,andassociateddisorders.
Inthechapter"TheMale Prevalence in Autism Spectrum Disorders:
Hypotheses on its Neurobiological
Basis",ItalianresearchersDrs.FlavioKellerandLilianaRutapresentneuroch-
ical hypotheses as the basis for the predominance of male
prevalence in autism discussing the possible roles of estrogen,
testosterone, oxytocin, and vasopressin in the organization of
brain circuits and hemispheric specialization. Psychiatrist Dr.
Ricardo Vella relates neuropathologies in autism, in the limbic and
cereb- lar regions, to speci?c behaviors and presents a
developmental perspective and hypotheses regarding emotional and
attachment behaviors in autistic individuals.
The first International Conference on Thermoelectric Properties of
Metallic Conductors was held at Michigan State University on August
10-12, 1977. The conference was sponsored and supported by the
National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research and the
Ford Motor Company. Although the topic may appear, at first glance,
rather narrow and of limited interest, it impacts significantly on
numerous fields of research, in each instance providing a unique
and fru- ful technique for securing important data that is
frequently difficult to obtain by other means. Thus, though
thermoelectricity is the thread that binds these pages together,
the papers constitute a patchwork quilt that includes critical
phenomena, superconductivity, many-body theory, quasi
one-dimensional systems, liquid metals, to mention only a few. This
volume contains the 12 invited and 31 contributed papers, arranged
in the order in which they were presented, as well as much of the
frequently spirited and always illuminating discussion that
followed these papers. Regrettably, not all of the discussion is
included. Difficulties with the recording system during the first
session (Wednesday morning) did not become apparent before the end
of that session, and, consequently, none of the discussion--some of
it fairly heated--appears in the proceedings; other remarks were
lost to posterity through occasional malfunctioning of the record
ing facilities and/or failure of speakers to come near a
microphone."
Dynamic psychotherapy research has become revitalized, especially
in the last three decades. This major study by Sidney Blatt,
Richard Ford, and their associates evaluates long-term intensive
treatment (hospital ization and 4-times-a-week psychotherapy) of
very disturbed patients at the Austen Riggs Center. The center
provides a felicitous setting for recovery-beautiful buildings on
lovely wooded grounds just off the quiet main street of the New
England town of Stockbridge, Massa chusetts. The center, which has
been headed in succession by such capable leaders as Robert Knight,
Otto Will, Daniel Schwartz, and now Edward Shapiro, has been well
known for decades for its type of inten sive hospitalization and
psychotherapy. Included in its staff have been such illustrious
contributors as Erik Erikson, David Rapaport, George Klein, and
Margaret Brenman. The Rapaport-Klein study group has been meeting
there yearly since Rapaport's death in 1960. Although the center is
a long-term care treatment facility, it remains successful and
solvent even in these days of increasingly short-term treatment.
Sidney Blatt, Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry at Yale Univer
sity, and Richard Ford of the Austen Riggs Center, and their
associates assembled a sample of 90 patients who had been in
long-term treatment and who had been given (initially and at 15
months) a set of psychologi cal tests, including the Rorschach, the
Thematic Apperception Test, a form of the Wechsler Intelligence
Test, and the Human Figure Drawings.
Thermoelectric and related transport properties of metals have been
a source of information and, also, exasperation to physicists for
over a century. Perhaps the principal reasons for interest in these
phenomena are their sensitivity to composition, structure and
external fields and, until fairly recently, the distressing fact
that often even gross experimental features such as the sign of the
thermopower eluded theoretical understanding. During the past two
decades many of the previously perplexing aspects of
thermoelectricity have yielded to more sophisticated theoretical
treat ment. As a result of this effort and concomitant experimental
work using advanced measurement techniques, there is now good
reason to believe that thermoelectric phenomena can shed much light
on the interactions between electrons and phonons, impurities, and
other defects. The last few years have witnessed new and
fascinating developments that promise to stimulate new activity in
this field. In contrast to the more conventional transport
properties, second-and high-order contributions in electron
scattering theory appear to play a profound role in
thermoelectricity-the controversy surrounding ordinary and "phony"
phonon drag is far from resolved; the startlingly large effect of
magnetic fields on the thermopower of metals appears to be linked
intimately to scattering anisotropy; quantum oscillations of
thermopower are orders of magnitude larger than corresponding
oscillations of the magnetoresistance; a new approach to
thermoelectric studies allows extension of thermopower measurements
into the millikelvin region of temperature; finally, the advent of
superconducting detection devices permits the precise measurement
of extremely small voltages, an essential requirement in this
field."
Medical geography is a fascinating area of rapidly evolving study
that aims to analyse and improve worldwide health issues based on
the geographical factors which have an impact on them. Perspectives
in Medical Geography will appeal to both novice and seasoned
researchers looking to be informed on the latest theories and
applications in the field. Chapters represent a wide range of
industries, ranging from private/public universities to private
companies to non-profit foundations. Contributors describe ways in
which map and geography librarians can engage in public health
research - creating data standards, archiving map collections and
providing mapping/GIS services. In addition to compiling current
theories and practices related to medical geography, this volume
also features commentaries from two pre-eminent geography
librarians, sharing their perspectives on this emerging field and
how map and geographic information librarians can engage in
health-related research through their profession. This book was
originally published as two special issues of the Journal of Map
& Geography Libraries.
The look and feel of metropolitan France has been a notable
preoccupation of French literary and visual culture since the
1980s. Numerous writers, filmmakers and photographers have been
drawn to articulate France's contrasting spatial qualities, from
infrastructural installations such as roads, rail lines and ports,
to peri-urban residential developments and isolated rural enclaves.
In doing so, they explore how the country's acute sense of national
identity has been both asserted and challenged in topographic
terms. This wide-ranging collection of essays explores how the
contemporary concern with space in France has taken shape across a
range of media, from recent cinema, documentary filmmaking and
photographic projects through to television drama and contemporary
fiction, and examines what it reveals about the state of the nation
in a post-colonial and post-industrial age. The impact of global
flows of capital, trade and migration can be mapped through
attention to the specificities of place and topography.
Investigation of liminal locations, from seaboard cities and
abandoned industrial sites to refugee camps and peasant
smallholdings, interrogates the assertion of a national territory
(and, by extension, a national identity) through the figure of the
hexagon, and highlights the fluidities, instabilities and lines of
flight which render it increasingly unsettled.
The look and feel of metropolitan France has been a notable
preoccupation of French literary and visual culture since the
1980s. Numerous writers, filmmakers and photographers have been
drawn to articulate France's contrasting spatial qualities, from
infrastructural installations such as roads, rail lines and ports,
to peri-urban residential developments and isolated rural enclaves.
In doing so, they explore how the country's acute sense of national
identity has been both asserted and challenged in topographic
terms. This wide-ranging collection of essays explores how the
contemporary concern with space in France has taken shape across a
range of media, from recent cinema, documentary filmmaking and
photographic projects through to television drama and contemporary
fiction, and examines what it reveals about the state of the nation
in a post-colonial and post-industrial age. The impact of global
flows of capital, trade and migration can be mapped through
attention to the specificities of place and topography.
Investigation of liminal locations, from seaboard cities and
abandoned industrial sites to refugee camps and peasant
smallholdings, interrogates the assertion of a national territory
(and, by extension, a national identity) through the figure of the
hexagon, and highlights the fluidities, instabilities and lines of
flight which render it increasingly unsettled.
Authoritative and comprehensive, this volume provides a
contemporary psychodynamic perspective on frequently encountered
psychological disorders in adults, children, and adolescents.
Leading international authorities review the growing evidence base
for psychoanalytic theories and therapeutic models. Chapters
examine the etiology and psychological mechanisms of each disorder
and thoroughly describe effective treatment strategies. Highly
accessible, the book is richly illustrated with clinical case
material. It demonstrates ways in which psychodynamic theory and
therapy are enhanced by integrating ideas and findings from
neuroscience, social and personality psychology,
cognitive-behavioral therapy, and other fields. Winner-Goethe Award
for Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Scholarship
The explosive proliferation of pictures in advertising and pop
culture, mass media, and cyberspace following World War II, along
with the profusion of critical thinking that tries to make sense of
it, has had wide-ranging implications for cultural production as
such. "Pictures into Words" explores how this proliferation of
graphic images has profoundly affected narrative writing in France,
especially, as Ari J. Blatt argues, the structure, content, and
symbolic logic of contemporary French fiction. By examining a
specific corpus of narratives by authors Claude Simon, Georges
Perec, Pierre Michon, and Tanguy Viel--books that originate amid,
conjure up, and indeed are essentially about pictures--Blatt
addresses the most salient questions pertaining to the relationship
between literature and visual culture today.
Each of the novels considered here engages the work of several
postwar artists, from Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Vincent van
Gogh, and Orson Welles to Jeff Koons, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Pierre
Huyghe, and Marcel Duchamp. As Blatt's cross-disciplinary readings
show, despite their gleeful raiding of the visual archive to
generate and enrich their stories, many contemporary narratives
that tell tales about pictures simultaneously express a cautious
skepticism toward vision and visual representation. "Pictures into
Words" examines how such novels, while seemingly complicit with the
visual, simultaneously "write back" against the images they
exploit, reclaiming some of literature's lost ground in our
visually inundated world.
Recent research indicates that depression, once believed to be
relatively benign, is highly recurrent and does not respond well to
treatment. The goal of this book is to facilitate the development
of more encompassing theories and more effective treatments for
this disabling disorder by fostering dialogue and enhancing the
integration of work across the boundaries of separate fields. Each
chapter offers an overview of the state of the art of research in a
particular area - cognitive-behavioral therapy, psychodynamic
therapy, epidemiology, developmental psychopathology, neurobiology
- and explores both the implications of the latest hypotheses and
findings for work in other areas and the barriers to constructive
collaboration. In an integrative Epilogue, the editors identify and
discuss the points of primary convergence. They note
dissatisfaction with the DSM approach to depression because it is
insufficiently informed by basic research, and with existing
guidelines for intervention because they underestimate the need for
more extended treatments for many patients, the importance of
patient and therapist factors, and the central role of the
therapeutic alliance. etiologically-based, dynamic interactionism
model of depression that emphasizes recursive interactions among
genetic and neurobiological factors, personality, and life stress
in etiology. Finally, they reflect on the potential of this dynamic
interactionism model to guide future research on mood disorders and
the formulation of treatment guidelines that are better informed by
science and more congruent with complex clinical reality.
Authoritative and comprehensive, this volume provides a
contemporary psychodynamic perspective on frequently encountered
psychological disorders in adults, children, and adolescents.
Leading international authorities review the growing evidence base
for psychoanalytic theories and therapeutic models. Chapters
examine the etiology and psychological mechanisms of each disorder
and thoroughly describe effective treatment strategies. Highly
accessible, the book is richly illustrated with clinical case
material. It demonstrates ways in which psychodynamic theory and
therapy are enhanced by integrating ideas and findings from
neuroscience, social and personality psychology,
cognitive-behavioral therapy, and other fields. Winner--Goethe
Award for Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Scholarship
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