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1 short-lived relationship with psychology and psychiatry.
2 g and impact adult behaviors of relevance to psychiatry.
3 ience, but is relatively new to the field of psychiatry.
4  discusses the genetics of complex traits in psychiatry.
5 ate these advances into diagnostic tools for psychiatry.
6            Multilevel explanations abound in psychiatry.
7 is point has been inadequately recognised in psychiatry.
8 -based, and hard-nosed nosologic approach to psychiatry.
9 ul model organism in the field of biological psychiatry.
10 be the clinical foundations of neurology and psychiatry.
11 as not been applied to processes relevant to psychiatry.
12 important problem for basic neuroscience and psychiatry.
13 come from pre-treatment neuroimaging data in psychiatry.
14 in computational neuroscience that relate to psychiatry.
15  are key principles in clinical medicine and psychiatry.
16 oviding significant application potential in psychiatry.
17 uld be operationalized within psychology and psychiatry.
18 lization of the pharmacological treatment in psychiatry.
19 the Clinical Application of Brain Imaging in Psychiatry.
20 the areas of neuropharmacology and molecular psychiatry.
21 e best replicated biological associations in psychiatry.
22 ntial for clinically applicable PGx tests in psychiatry.
23 he impact of personality disorder in liaison psychiatry.
24  stimulated key developments in the field of psychiatry.
25 haviors and their potential implications for psychiatry.
26 oarousal is a crucial endeavor in biological psychiatry.
27 ly medicine, 3.1% in pediatrics, and 2.6% in psychiatry.
28 aining in epidemiology and other sciences in psychiatry.
29 first decade (2000-2009) of cGxE research in psychiatry.
30 luable for navigating contemporary issues in psychiatry.
31 ions with behavioural phenotypes relevant to psychiatry.
32 enotyping, which is a goal for computational psychiatry.
33 stions of cardinal interest to neurology and psychiatry.
34  surgery, internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry.
35 acy of the postwar critique of psychodynamic psychiatry.
36 and interpretation of MR imaging findings in psychiatry.
37 a had on subsequent developments in American psychiatry.
38  training programs and not by departments of psychiatry.
39 mptoms play a crucial role in psychology and psychiatry.
40 sorders at the intersection of neurology and psychiatry.
41 t been translated to public health impact in psychiatry.
42 epelin in the 1890s has substantially shaped psychiatry.
43 g characteristic of the practice of clinical psychiatry.
44 to those for other efficacious treatments in psychiatry.
45 d worldwide during the past year on forensic psychiatry.
46 en largely ignored or rejected by mainstream psychiatry.
47 cts either directly or indirectly related to psychiatry.
48 s, contributing to the rise of a new era for psychiatry.
49 ility of this new tissue engineering tool in psychiatry.
50 erimental tool for consciousness science and psychiatry.
51  is the largest consortium in the history of psychiatry.
52 , resonating recent efforts in computational psychiatry.
53 rs were associated with choosing a career in psychiatry.
54 ue natural disease entities may not exist in psychiatry.
55 em is a recent development in the history of psychiatry.
56 isease-relevant discoveries in neurology and psychiatry.
57 es for all medical disciplines, particularly psychiatry.
58  used as a therapeutic tool in neurology and psychiatry.
59 rmacological and psychological treatments in psychiatry.
60 index is an unrealized goal in neurology and psychiatry.
61 ttempting to identify reliable biomarkers in psychiatry.
62 delines for predictive analytics projects in psychiatry, (2) provide a conceptual introduction to cor
63 5], pediatrics, 24.92 [95% CI, 24.59-25.27], psychiatry, 24.61 [95% CI, 24.33-25.01], surgery 24.97 [
64 4], pediatrics, 73.11 [95% CI, 72.38-73.84], psychiatry, 72.17 [95% CI, 71.52-72.81], surgery, 72.37
65                                Computational psychiatry accounts have linked this clinical observatio
66  the etiology of rare familial ASD.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 13 December 2016;
67 anslational profile of these cells.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 13 December 2016;
68 rapies against affective disorders.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 15 November 2016;
69  current heavy alcohol consumption.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 15 November 2016;
70 K3 in the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 18 October 2016;
71 dence for STEP61 dysfunction in SZ.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 18 October 2016;
72 e free of other physical illnesses.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 18 October 2016;
73 ipants who were positive for FRAAs.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 18 October 2016;
74 of other members of the CLC family.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 23 August 2016; d
75 ment in Alzheimer disease patients.Molecular Psychiatry advance online publication, 25 October 2016;
76                                Computational psychiatry aims to apply mathematical and computational
77                                Computational Psychiatry aims to describe the relationship between the
78 -to-bench concept has not been explicated in psychiatry, although there are an increasing number of e
79 ance spectroscopy study at the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Al
80 ology, still has quite a bit to teach modern psychiatry and can be a more generative forefather than
81 in the clinical sample were drawn from child psychiatry and child health clinics in England and Wales
82 volving subspecialty of radiology mainly for psychiatry and clinical psychology.
83 ll for the continued growth of computational psychiatry and computational neurology.
84 uide differential diagnosis in computational psychiatry and computational psychosomatics.
85  that nonadherence is a global challenge for psychiatry and has linked nonadherence to poorer outcome
86 nsistent and replicable genetics findings in psychiatry and have been associated with schizophrenia,
87  The studies of expectations in the field of psychiatry and in other fields of medicine suggest that
88 has become a central technique of biological psychiatry and is uniquely suited to assess functional a
89 f Science categories Genetics & Heredity and Psychiatry and measured how individual results deviated
90  the 20th century, especially in relation to psychiatry and mental illness.
91 t can be obtained from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology ( www.abpn.com ).
92 t can be obtained from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology ( www.abpn.com ).
93 t can be obtained from the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology ( www.abpn.com ).
94 formal subspecialty by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, are discussed.
95  of the 2014 Report of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc.
96  of the 2016 Report of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc.
97  of the 2015 Report of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc.
98 arget serotonin receptors are used widely in psychiatry and neurology.
99 for motivational and psychomotor symptoms in psychiatry and neurology.
100  (ASDs) represent a formidable challenge for psychiatry and neuroscience because of their high preval
101 as been conducted primarily in the fields of psychiatry and neuroscience, but there have been some se
102 making process concerning the use of liaison psychiatry and other clinical services.
103  autism, were recruited from community child psychiatry and paediatric outpatient clinics.
104  screening instrument to medical students on psychiatry and primary care clerkships could increase th
105                        For 25 years academic psychiatry and primary care have known that only 10-50%
106 isorders in the first four 2013 issues of 12 psychiatry and psychology journals.
107                     Experts in the fields of psychiatry and psychology, transplantation, social work,
108 ater impact on the development of biological psychiatry and psychopharmacology than work on any other
109 ng a holistic approach based on evolutionary psychiatry and suggest a way forward, integrating etholo
110                  Thus, the interface between psychiatry and the rest of medicine represents an approp
111 unity to acknowledge the origins of military psychiatry and the start of a journey from psychological
112 dge from studies of cognitive remediation in psychiatry and we highlight open questions.
113 cies of Weill Cornell Institute of Geriatric Psychiatry and were randomly assigned to 12 weekly sessi
114 en ophthalmology, optometry, rehabilitation, psychiatry, and behavioral psychology may prevent depres
115    The role of irritability in developmental psychiatry, and in the pathophysiology of mood and anxie
116 atory processes and microglial activation in psychiatry, and likely in other neuropathological condit
117 vioural economics, clinical neuropsychology, psychiatry, and neurology, to provide a coherent framewo
118 ence, cardiology, endocrinology, nephrology, psychiatry, and obstetrics and gynecology, but also from
119  gastroenterology and hepatology, neurology, psychiatry, and paediatrics.
120  investigators from neuroscience, economics, psychiatry, and social and clinical psychology to develo
121 orders suggests that diet is as important to psychiatry as it is to cardiology, endocrinology, and ga
122 tegory being severely challenged from within psychiatry as well as from without.
123  tools of narrative are proving valuable for psychiatry as well.
124 support the use of a dimensional approach in psychiatry, as promoted by the Research Domain Criteria
125 l and clinically usable peripheral signal in psychiatry, as they have been doing for other fields of
126 for Mental Health, SLaM and the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London, Psychiatry Research
127 for Mental Health, SLaM and the Institute of Psychiatry at King's College London, Psychiatry Research
128 nter, the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at New York University Langone Medical Center
129 trol longitudinal study at the Department of Psychiatry at the University Medical Center Utrecht, Utr
130  sample was recruited from the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Munster from 2010 to 201
131 f his inaugural lecture on becoming chair of psychiatry at the University of Tartu (known at the time
132  Edwin Gildea recruited to the Department of Psychiatry at Washington University faculty who advocate
133 try is also on the rise and promises to help psychiatry be responsive to increasing critical concerns
134 lso help bridge a major gap in translational psychiatry between basic characterization of animal mode
135 g study that has been conducted at the Child Psychiatry Branch of the National Institute of Mental He
136                                Computational psychiatry, broadly defined, encompasses two complementa
137 t is showing promise as a treatment model in psychiatry but its therapeutic mechanisms are poorly und
138 or supersede other knowledge and research in psychiatry, but it can help psychiatry understand how pe
139 ease the number of medical students choosing psychiatry, but little is known about when students deci
140 tent biological findings in major depression psychiatry, but the mechanisms underlying this abnormali
141 cision making, and discuss how computational psychiatry can benefit from foraging theory.
142                                 Such work in psychiatry can provide an example of how to address othe
143 of Southern Denmark; the Research Council of Psychiatry, Capital Region of Denmark; and the Strategic
144 semble diseases from the field of neurology, psychiatry, cardiology and even urology.
145 re the factors most strongly associated with psychiatry career choice.
146                 As part of the Lancet/Lancet Psychiatry China-India Mental Health Alliance Series, we
147  with contemporary theoretical approaches to psychiatry, circuit coupling correlated positively with
148              A rating of "excellent" for the psychiatry clerkship (odds ratio=2.66), a major in psych
149 psychology majors and providing an exemplary psychiatry clerkship are modifiable factors that may inc
150  of at least moderate severity in outpatient psychiatry clinics in academic medical centers.
151                                  The Genomic Psychiatry Cohort is a clinically assessed, multiethnic
152 nd severe psychotic disorders in the Genomic Psychiatry Cohort.
153  and 250 controls (n = 497) from the Genomic Psychiatry Cohort.
154                                Computational psychiatry combines multiple levels and types of computa
155                                           In psychiatry, comparative analyses of therapeutic options
156 ng and stability of student career choice of psychiatry compared with other specialties and determine
157 rs which stem from cardiology, neurology and psychiatry: Congestive Heart Failure (CHF), Major Depres
158  proper role of religion and spirituality in psychiatry continues as a matter of debate.
159 make developmental or lifespan inferences in psychiatry: cross-sectional, single-cohort longitudinal,
160 ifting in dermatology; however, studies from psychiatry demonstrate its efficacy.
161 d with the Structured Clinical Interview for Psychiatry Disorders.
162 but the vast majority of students who choose psychiatry do so during medical school.
163                                    Narrative psychiatry does not negate or supersede other knowledge
164 s published on the subject of the history of psychiatry during 2006 and 2007.
165 n concepts and findings from transdiagnostic psychiatry, emotion research, and behavioral and cogniti
166      A more appropriate scientific model for psychiatry emphasizes the understanding of mechanisms, a
167                                 Contemporary psychiatry faces major challenges.
168 ore than 80 years since researchers in child psychiatry first documented developmental delays among c
169 uccessful genome-wide association results in psychiatry for drug repurposing is an ongoing challenge.
170 tential bridge for translational research in psychiatry for several reasons.
171 onsiders much recent work focused around the Psychiatry for the Person Programme of the World Psychia
172 maging (MRI) provide an opportunity to bring psychiatry from an era of subjective descriptive classif
173  at the Weill Cornell Institute of Geriatric Psychiatry from April 1, 2006, to September 31, 2011.
174 ansancestry meta-analyses with data from the Psychiatry Genomics Consortium (PGC2).
175                                We argue that psychiatry has a lot to gain from a positive engagement
176                            Drug discovery in psychiatry has been limited to chemical modifications of
177                                              Psychiatry has been particularly enamoured with intermed
178 arch supporting the classification system in psychiatry has not kept up with these scientific advance
179                                              Psychiatry has similarly emphasized the basic sciences a
180 t English translations of Foucault's work on psychiatry have been published.
181  such as anesthesia, emergency medicine, and psychiatry have higher rates of drug abuse, probably rel
182             To date, however, PGx studies in psychiatry have not yielded compelling results, and clin
183                              Developments in psychiatry have ratified the existence of behavioral add
184 -by-environment interaction (GxE) studies in psychiatry have typically been conducted using a candida
185                         Advances in forensic psychiatry help better identify persons with intellectua
186     To begin organizing the basic science of psychiatry in a comprehensive manner, we begin by select
187  Use Disorders at the University Hospital of Psychiatry in Basel were studied after heroin and placeb
188 disability, suggesting an important role for psychiatry in promoting successful aging.
189                      We review computational psychiatry in terms of the ambitions of investigators, e
190 a--all derived from the beginnings of modern psychiatry in the early nineteenth century.
191 ation requests made to Internal Medicine and Psychiatry in the post-GTCS group (N = 31 vs N = 18, P =
192  an icon of postpsychoanalytic medical-model psychiatry in the United States.
193 ty faculty who advocated a medical model for psychiatry in which diagnosis had a central role.
194 nity context represents an important area in psychiatry, in terms of both research and clinical pract
195 s is a particular challenge for the field of psychiatry, in which diagnosis is based on a descriptive
196 focusing on the most prevalent conditions in psychiatry, including depression, anxiety disorders, bip
197 of JAMA Psychiatry (then Archives of General Psychiatry), incorrect unadjusted data appeared in the a
198                                    Choice of psychiatry increased from 1.6% at the start of medical s
199      CONTEXT Unlike other areas of medicine, psychiatry is almost entirely dependent on patient repor
200                                    Narrative psychiatry is also on the rise and promises to help psyc
201                                 The field of psychiatry is approaching a major inflection point.
202                                              Psychiatry is at an important juncture, with the current
203 ied and important research on the history of psychiatry is being performed around the world.
204                           BD illustrates how psychiatry is being transformed by contemporary neurosci
205        With respect to causes and disorders, psychiatry is characterized by a 'many to many' relation
206  and can help shed light on the way in which psychiatry is conducted today.
207                     Progress in personalised psychiatry is dependent on researchers having access to
208 that should guide clinical practice in child psychiatry is encouraged, this might create greater trus
209 , and clinical utilization of PGx testing in psychiatry is extremely limited.
210                                              Psychiatry is in need of a major overhaul.
211         One of the most reliable findings in psychiatry is in the incidence of anxiety and depression
212  of common polymorphisms in guiding clinical psychiatry is limited by the complex polygenic architect
213 owever, while this computational approach to psychiatry is rapidly gaining attention, much work remai
214      The need for new research strategies in psychiatry is urgent.
215 gery, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation, A
216 riven largely by social forces with American psychiatry, Kraepelin's system spread throughout the Uni
217      Research and clinical investigations in psychiatry largely rely on the de facto assumption that
218                                           In psychiatry, major challenges include the relative subtle
219 unding the role of the neuroimmune system in psychiatry may not turn into therapeutic hope for affect
220  (mean difference, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.18-1.12), psychiatry (mean difference, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.20-1.12), a
221 tinue to reach mainstream neurology and even psychiatry, more cell-surface-directed antibodies will b
222 ers recruited at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry (MPIP, 131 non-medicated cases and 169 contro
223 examination were performed by specialists in psychiatry, neurology and internal medicine/infectious d
224 aluations of sulfur amino-acid metabolism in psychiatry, neurology, and neuro-oncology and of lipidom
225 differing approaches to the phenomenological psychiatry-neuroscience interface: the neo-phenomenologi
226         At this unique and exciting time for psychiatry, novel therapies for individuals with mental
227 multidisciplinary panel of medical oncology, psychiatry, nursing, hospice and palliative medicine, co
228               Here, we discuss the molecular psychiatry of zebrafish, and its implications for transl
229    Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in psychiatry, once they reach sufficient sample size and p
230 ology researchers, but largely unexamined in psychiatry or biology.
231 various control conditions typically used in psychiatry, outline their effect on the internal validit
232 romise to revolutionize clinical practice in psychiatry paralleling similar developments in personali
233 odern medicine but remain largely elusive in psychiatry, partly because there is a weak correspondenc
234                                Computational psychiatry potentially provides powerful tools for eluci
235 Technology Assessment Cost Questionnaire for Psychiatry, Productivity and Disease Questionnaire, and
236 n the main stakeholders in mental health and psychiatry (professionals, patients or service users and
237 ectives and approaches from phenomenological psychiatry, psychology, and medical humanities.
238 dsley NHS Foundation Trust, and Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College
239 ognitive trade-offs should be a priority for psychiatry, psychology, neuroscience, and genetics.
240 alized workload management; consolidation of psychiatry, psychology, psychiatric nursing, and social
241 nglish language literature on the history of psychiatry published within the previous year.
242               A common question in perinatal psychiatry regards the risk-benefit profile of pharmacot
243 nsurance Foundation; the Research Council of Psychiatry, Region of Southern Denmark; the Research Cou
244 rology, behavioral and cognitive deficits in psychiatry remain impervious to this approach.
245          Explore/exploit paradigms can offer psychiatry research a new approach to studying motivatio
246 uces the term translational epidemiology for psychiatry research as a bidirectional concept in which
247 tute of Psychiatry at King's College London, Psychiatry Research Trust, Maudsley Charity Research Fun
248 tute of Psychiatry at King's College London, Psychiatry Research Trust, Maudsley Charity Research Fun
249 velopment Programme, UK Ministry of Justice, Psychiatry Research Trust, NIHR Biomedical Research Cent
250 of the International Society for Nutritional Psychiatry Research), in which we provide a context and
251 pidly emerging new field in modern molecular psychiatry research.
252 sfunction in schizophrenia is a priority for psychiatry research.
253 hair cortisol analyses for future biological psychiatry research.
254 mensional, biologically-grounded approach to psychiatry research.
255            Additionally, if resources allow, psychiatry researchers could consider offering to return
256                                 Furthermore, psychiatry researchers often generate findings that do n
257 ief overview on the status of PGx studies in psychiatry, review the commercialization process for PGx
258     Finally, we review some of Computational Psychiatry's applications to neurological disorders, suc
259  In our paper, part of The Lancet and Lancet Psychiatry's Series about the China-India Mental Health
260 HTA-SADD) trial in participants from old-age psychiatry services in nine centres in England.
261  in five patients presenting to most liaison psychiatry services suffers from a personality disorder.
262                 This goal has been an aim of psychiatry since the 19th century, when patients with ge
263 14 (N=29,713), the authors computed rates of psychiatry specialty choice at the beginning and end of
264                             The stability of psychiatry specialty choice from matriculation to gradua
265 determine the association of 29 factors with psychiatry specialty choice.
266 fiable factors that may increase the rate of psychiatry specialty choice.
267 gical account of the borderline construct in psychiatry, summarizing progress in decade-long interval
268 f Mental Health, UPMC Endowment in Geriatric Psychiatry, Taylor Family Institute for Innovative Psych
269               For environmental exposures in psychiatry that cannot be studied experimentally, co-twi
270       Neuropsychiatry is the subspecialty of psychiatry that deals with disorders at the intersection
271  interview taught in academic departments of psychiatry that is impractical in primary care settings
272 viable and underutilized class of designs in psychiatry that represents a significant improvement ove
273 ll provide a natural basis for a 'stratified psychiatry' that will improve clinical outcomes across c
274                                           In psychiatry, the identification of measured gene-environm
275 within the diagnostic categories used within psychiatry, the many different forms of genetic variatio
276 ner criteria made three key contributions to psychiatry: the systematic use of operationalized diagno
277  published in the January 2008 issue of JAMA Psychiatry (then Archives of General Psychiatry), incorr
278 published in the February 2011 issue of JAMA Psychiatry (then Archives of General Psychiatry), there
279 of JAMA Psychiatry (then Archives of General Psychiatry), there were 2 errors.
280 g major contributions to fields ranging from psychiatry to economics.
281  crucial because it will enable the field of psychiatry to move forward into the era of modern medici
282 commitment to a clinical research agenda for psychiatry (to utilize methods of clinical assessment an
283                  In the 1950s, when American psychiatry under psychoanalytic dominance had little int
284  and research in psychiatry, but it can help psychiatry understand how people use psychiatric knowled
285                                          The psychiatry unit had the most patients eligible for immed
286  detection of psychosis at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland.
287 h the inpatient service of the Department of Psychiatry, University of Muenster, from March 11, 2010,
288                            In 1896, American psychiatry was demoralized as the idyllic asylums had be
289  into the cultural context and ways in which psychiatry was practised in the past and can help shed l
290 Likewise, claims for the efficacy of forward psychiatry were inflated.
291 er (shellshock) and a new treatment (forward psychiatry) were introduced, but the former should not b
292  mechanisms, will be far more challenging in psychiatry where causal networks contain multiple nonlin
293 ation comes from the fields of neurology and psychiatry, where a central goal is the characterization
294 ing with the complexity of mental health and psychiatry which is steeped in values or a solution to a
295       Current issues in consultation-liaison psychiatry, which is now labeled psychosomatic medicine
296                             Pain training in psychiatry will contribute to deeper and more sophistica
297 y-life experiences have long been a focus in psychiatry, with a historic neurobiological emphasis on
298     Advances in brain sciences continue, but psychiatry would do well to work with philosophers in th
299 ve translational model for new treatments in psychiatry would facilitate shorter studies, improve fea
300 e experiences of hallucination is central to psychiatry, yet systematic empirical research on the phe

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