6 results on '"Stanghellini G"'
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2. Values in Persons With Schizophrenia
- Author
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Stanghellini, G., primary and Ballerini, M., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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3. Vulnerability to Schizophrenia and Lack of Common Sense
- Author
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Stanghellini, G., primary
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Abnormal Space Experiences in Persons With Schizophrenia: An Empirical Qualitative Study.
- Author
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Stanghellini G, Fernandez AV, Ballerini M, Blasi S, Belfiore E, Cutting J, and Mancini M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Depersonalization etiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Qualitative Research, Retrospective Studies, Schizophrenia complications, Young Adult, Depersonalization physiopathology, Perceptual Disorders physiopathology, Personal Space, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Space Perception physiology
- Abstract
Abnormal space experience (ASE) is a common feature of schizophrenia, despite its absence from current diagnostic manuals. Phenomenological psychopathologists have investigated this experiential disturbance, but these studies were typically based on anecdotal evidence from limited clinical interactions. To better understand the nature of ASE in schizophrenia and attempt to validate previous phenomenological accounts, we conducted a qualitative study of 301 people with schizophrenia. Clinical files were analyzed by means of Consensual Qualitative Research, an inductive method for analyzing descriptions of lived experience. Our main findings can be summed up as follows: (1) ASEs are a relevant feature in schizophrenia (70.1% of patients reported at least 1 ASE). (2) ASE in schizophrenia are characterized by 5 main categories of phenomena (listed from more represented to less represented): (a) experiences of strangeness and unfamiliarity (eg "Everything appeared weird. Face distorted, world looks terrible, nasty"); (b) experiences of centrality/invasion of peripersonal space (eg "Handkerchief on scaffolding: message telling him something"); (c) alteration of the quality of things (eg "Buildings leaning down"); (d) alteration of the quality of the environment (eg "Person sitting six feet away seemed to be at an infinite distance"); and (e) itemization and perceptive salience (eg "All patients [in ward] have bright eyes"). (3) ASEs are much more frequent in acute (91.9%) than in chronic (28.15%) schizophrenia patients. Moreover, our findings further empirical support for phenomenological accounts of schizophrenia, including those developed by Jaspers, Binswanger, Minkowski, and Conrad, among others and provide the background for translational research., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Psychopathology of Lived Time: Abnormal Time Experience in Persons With Schizophrenia.
- Author
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Stanghellini G, Ballerini M, Presenza S, Mancini M, Raballo A, Blasi S, and Cutting J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, Deja Vu psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Qualitative Research, Retrospective Studies, Self Concept, Sense of Coherence, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major physiopathology, Perceptual Distortion, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Schizophrenic Psychology, Time Perception
- Abstract
Abnormal time experience (ATE) in schizophrenia is a long-standing theme of phenomenological psychopathology. This is because temporality constitutes the bedrock of any experience and its integrity is fundamental for the sense of coherence and continuity of selfhood and personal identity. To characterize ATE in schizophrenia patients as compared to major depressives we interviewed, in a clinical setting over a period of 15 years, 550 consecutive patients affected by schizophrenic and affective disorders. Clinical files were analyzed by means of Consensual Qualitative Research (CQR), an inductive method suited to research that requires rich descriptions of inner experiences. Of the whole sample, 109 persons affected by schizophrenic (n = 95 acute, n = 14 chronic) and 37 by major depression reported at least 1 ATE. ATE are more represented in acute (N = 109 out of 198; 55%) than in chronic schizophrenic patients (N = 14 out of 103; 13%). The main feature of ATE in people with schizophrenia is the fragmentation of time experience (71 out of 109 patients), an impairment of the automatic and prereflexive synthesis of primal impression-retention-protention. This includes 4 subcategories: disruption of time flowing, déjà vu/vecu, premonitions about oneself and the external world. We contrasted ATE in schizophrenia and in major depression, finding relevant differences: in major depressives there is no disarticulation of time experience, rather timelessness because time lacks duration, not articulation. These core features of the schizophrenic pheno-phenotype may be related to self-disorders and to the manifold of characteristic schizophrenic symptoms, including so called bizarre delusions and verbal-acoustic hallucinations., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Values in persons with schizophrenia.
- Author
-
Stanghellini G and Ballerini M
- Subjects
- Delusions diagnosis, Delusions psychology, Delusions therapy, Humans, Interview, Psychological, Metaphysics, Psychotherapy, Schizophrenia therapy, Schizotypal Personality Disorder psychology, Schizotypal Personality Disorder therapy, Self Concept, Social Adjustment, Social Conformity, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenic Psychology, Schizotypal Personality Disorder diagnosis, Social Values
- Abstract
This is an explorative study on the values of persons with schizophrenia based on transcripts of individual therapy sessions conducted for 40 persons with chart diagnoses of schizophrenia or schizotypal disorder. Values are action-guiding attitudes that subject human activities to be worthy of praise or blame. The schizophrenic value system conveys an overall crisis of common sense. The outcome of this has been designated as antagonomia and idionomia. Antagonomia reflects the choice to take an eccentric stand in the face of commonly shared assumptions and the here and now "other." Idionomia reflects the feeling of the radical uniqueness and exceptionality of one's being with respect to common sense and the other human beings. This sentiment of radical exceptionality is felt as a "gift," often in view of an eschatological mission or a vocation to a superior, novel, metaphysical understanding of the world. The aim of this study is neither establishing new diagnostic criteria nor suggesting that values play an etio-pathogenetical role in the development of schizophrenia but improving our understanding of the "meaning" of schizophrenic experiences and beliefs, and by doing so reducing stigmatization, and enhancing the specificity and validity of "psychotic symptoms" (especially bizarre delusions) and of "social and occupational dysfunction" through a detailed description of the anthropological and existential matrix they arise from.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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