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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nancy C. Andreasen, MD PhD (University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics )Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing Imprint: American Psychiatric Association Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.313kg ISBN: 9781585622009ISBN 10: 1585622001 Pages: 160 Publication Date: 19 February 2005 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsContributors Foreword Introduction Chapter 1. Molecular Structure of Nucleic Acids: A Structure for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid Chapter 2. Psychiatric Genetics: A Methodologic Critique Chapter 3. Psychiatry in the Genomics Era Chapter 4. Will the Genomics Revolution Revolutionize Psychiatry? Chapter 5. The Endophenotype Concept in Psychiatry: Etymology and Strategic Intentions Chapter 6. The Genes and Brains of Mice and Men Chapter 7. Microarray Technology: A Review of New Strategies to Discover Candidate Vulnerability Genes in Psychiatric Disorders Afterword IndexReviewsOn what do almost all psychiatrists agree? First, that people are born with different personalities and temperaments and that these predispositions have important effects on our ultimate emotional and behavioral repertoires. Second, that the experiences we have from birth have tremendous influence on the ways in which our predetermined personalities and temperaments shape our ultimate mental lives. Psychopharmacologists, cognitive psychologists, and psychoanalysts, I believe, would find nothing especially controversial, provocative, or heretical about these statements. What is missing from the statements, however, is a fundamental understanding of why these facts are so. Read, however, Research Advances in Genetics and Genomics: Implications for Psychiatry, a wonderful book edited by a sage in our field, Nancy C. Andreasen, M.D., Ph.D., and come away feeling that one is as close as one can be to understanding why we are the way we are. The approach to genomics in this important volume is entirely free of cant, divisive rhetoric, or partisanship. Rather, it lays out for us the ways in which genes and the environment are likely to play out their exquisite relationship to determine who will be obsessive, who will hallucinate, and who will survive enormous stress with consistent equanimity. This book gives the reader the technical basis for understanding some of the most fundamental aspects of human behavior and emotion, the very things that psychiatrists deal with on a daily basis. As such, it is must reading. - Jack M. Gorman, M.D., Esther and Joseph Klingenstein Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Professor of Neuroscience, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York """On what do almost all psychiatrists agree? First, that people are born with different personalities and temperaments and that these predispositions have important effects on our ultimate emotional and behavioral repertoires. Second, that the experiences we have from birth have tremendous influence on the ways in which our predetermined personalities and temperaments shape our ultimate mental lives. Psychopharmacologists, cognitive psychologists, and psychoanalysts, I believe, would find nothing especially controversial, provocative, or heretical about these statements. What is missing from the statements, however, is a fundamental understanding of why these facts are so. Read, however, Research Advances in Genetics and Genomics: Implications for Psychiatry, a wonderful book edited by a sage in our field, Nancy C. Andreasen, M.D., Ph.D., and come away feeling that one is as close as one can be to understanding why we are the way we are. The approach to genomics in this important volume is entirely free of cant, divisive rhetoric, or partisanship. Rather, it lays out for us the ways in which genes and the environment are likely to play out their exquisite relationship to determine who will be obsessive, who will hallucinate, and who will survive enormous stress with consistent equanimity. This book gives the reader the technical basis for understanding some of the most fundamental aspects of human behavior and emotion, the very things that psychiatrists deal with on a daily basis. As such, it is must reading."" - Jack M. Gorman, M.D., Esther and Joseph Klingenstein Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Professor of Neuroscience, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York""" This book, edited and written by pioneers in the field, attempts to 'translate' this burgeoning science for practicing psychiatrists... This is an excellent introduction to the exploding knowledge in molecular genetics and its implications for the practice of psychiatry. Michael J. Schrift, Doody's Health Sciences Book Review Journal Author InformationNancy C. Andreasen, M.D., Ph.D., is Andrew H. Woods Chair of Psychiatry at The University of Iowa College of Medicine in Iowa City, Iowa; Director of The MIND Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico; and Editor-in-Chief of The American Journal of Psychiatry. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |