Literature DB >> 16984292

Beliefs about essences and the reality of mental disorders.

Woo-kyoung Ahn1, Elizabeth H Flanagan, Jessecae K Marsh, Charles A Sanislow.   

Abstract

Do people believe mental disorders are real and possess underlying essences? The current study found that both novices and practicing clinicians held weaker essentialist beliefs about mental disorders than about medical disorders. They were also unwilling to endorse the idea that mental disorders are real and natural. Furthermore, compared with novices, mental health clinicians were less likely to endorse the view that there is a shared cause underlying a mental disorder and that one needs to remove the cause to get rid of the mental disorder. Clinicians were polarized on their views about whether mental disorders are categorical or dimensional. These findings reflect current controversies about mental disorders in the field at large.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16984292      PMCID: PMC2644333          DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01779.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  11 in total

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Authors:  J C Wakefield
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1999-08

2.  Essentialism revisited: evolutionary theory and the concept of mental disorder.

Authors:  S O Lilienfeld; L Marino
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1999-08

Review 3.  Toward DSM-V and the classification of psychopathology.

Authors:  T A Widiger; L A Clark
Journal:  Psychol Bull       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 17.737

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Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  1999-06

Review 5.  Disorder as harmful dysfunction: a conceptual critique of DSM-III-R's definition of mental disorder.

Authors:  J C Wakefield
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  1992-04       Impact factor: 8.934

6.  Is life stress more traumatic than traumatic stress?

Authors:  Sari D Gold; Brian P Marx; Jose M Soler-Baillo; Denise M Sloan
Journal:  J Anxiety Disord       Date:  2005

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Authors:  C W Kalish
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1995-05

8.  Psychiatric diagnosis as prototype categorization.

Authors:  N Cantor; E E Smith; R S French; J Mezzich
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1980-04

9.  Aristotle, Galileo, and the DSM taxonomy: the case of schizophrenia.

Authors:  R C Carson
Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol       Date:  1996-12

Review 10.  Mental disorder as a Roschian concept: a critique of Wakefield's "harmful dysfunction" analysis.

Authors:  S O Lilienfeld; L Marino
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  1995-08
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  11 in total

1.  Do lions have manes? For children, generics are about kinds rather than quantities.

Authors:  Amanda C Brandone; Andrei Cimpian; Sarah-Jane Leslie; Susan A Gelman
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2012-01-11

2.  The philosophies of psychiatry: empirical perspectives.

Authors:  Alan S G Ralston
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2013-08

3.  Psychiatric disorders: natural kinds made by the world or practical kinds made by us?

Authors:  Peter Zachar
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 49.548

4.  Classification as diagnostic reasoning.

Authors:  Bob Rehder; Shinwoo Kim
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2009-09

5.  Mental Health Clinicians' Beliefs About the Biological, Psychological, and Environmental Bases of Mental Disorders.

Authors:  Woo-Kyoung Ahn; Caroline C Proctor; Elizabeth H Flanagan
Journal:  Cogn Sci       Date:  2009-03

Review 6.  Biomedical Explanations of Psychopathology and Their Implications for Attitudes and Beliefs About Mental Disorders.

Authors:  Matthew S Lebowitz; Paul S Appelbaum
Journal:  Annu Rev Clin Psychol       Date:  2018-11-16       Impact factor: 18.561

7.  Neuroscientific explanations and the stigma of mental disorder: a meta-analytic study.

Authors:  Amy Loughman; Nick Haslam
Journal:  Cogn Res Princ Implic       Date:  2018-11-14

8.  Thinking you can catch mental illness: how beliefs about membership attainment and category structure influence interactions with mental health category members.

Authors:  Jessecae K Marsh; Lindzi L Shanks
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2014-10

9.  Common Sense Beliefs about the Central Self, Moral Character, and the Brain.

Authors:  Diego Fernandez-Duque; Barry Schwartz
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-01-12

10.  Categories convey prescriptive information across domains and development.

Authors:  Emily Foster-Hanson; Steven O Roberts; Susan A Gelman; Marjorie Rhodes
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  2021-08-03
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