ABSTRACT

This book reviews the descriptive features of psychotic symptoms in various medical conditions (psychiatric, early psychosis, general medical, neurological and dementia), non-medical settings (individuals without the need for care or at high risk for psychosis) and age groups (children and adolescents, adults, older adults). Similarly, the perspectives of many disciplines are provided (history, psychiatry, psychology, psychopathology, neurology, phenomenological philosophy) so that readers may become familiar with different approaches that are used to define, evaluate and categorize psychosis, at times independently of clinical diagnosis. This book is a resource book for those requiring an understanding of clinical and conceptual issues associated with psychosis, with chapters written by academics and clinicians who are leaders in their respective fields. The book also provides a guide regarding the methods of assessment for psychosis and its symptoms, with 120 rating scales, which are described and evaluated. The Assessment of Psychosis will be particularly useful to the clinical and research community, but also to readers interested in individual differences and human psychopathology.

part I|74 pages

What Is Psychosis?

chapter 1|14 pages

History of Concepts about Psychosis

What Was It, What Is It?

chapter 3|11 pages

The Brain

From Transition to First-Episode Psychosis

part II|87 pages

Psychosis in Different Population Groups

part III|92 pages

The Assessment of Psychotic Symptoms

chapter 12|16 pages

Auditory Hallucinations

chapter 14|14 pages

Delusions

chapter 15|14 pages

Language Disorder

chapter 16|12 pages

Insight

chapter 17|10 pages

Disturbance of the Experience of Self

A Phenomenologically-Based Approach