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Psychology & Psychiatry news

Psychology & Psychiatry

Coordinated brain network activity during emotional arousal may explain vivid, lasting memories

Past psychology studies suggest that people tend to remember emotional events, such as their wedding, the birth of a child or traumatic experiences, more vividly than neutral events, such as a routine professional meeting. ...

Diseases, Conditions, Syndromes

Parents who struggle to identify emotions may face higher burnout, alexithymia study finds

Researchers at the Institute of Psychology at the Maria Grzegorzewska University in Warsaw report associations between alexithymia and parental burnout and sex-specific differences.

Psychology & Psychiatry

Lower vitamin D consistently linked with higher depression in adults

Researchers report in a study, published in Biomolecules and Biomedicine, that lower blood levels of vitamin D are consistently linked with higher rates of depression in adults—especially when 25-hydroxy-vitamin D [25(OH)D] ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

The shortcomings of AI responses to mental health crises

Can you imagine someone in a mental health crisis—instead of calling a helpline—typing their desperate thoughts into an app window? This is happening more and more often in a world dominated by artificial intelligence. ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

Brain pathway may fuel both aggression and self-harm

Aggression and self-harm often co-occur in individuals with a history of early-life trauma—a connection that has largely been documented by self-reporting in research and clinical settings. Adding to this connection, individuals ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

Urban living linked to chronic stress epidemic in modern humans

Chronic stress is on the rise—the result of an evolutionary mismatch that our bodies and brains, adapted over hundreds of thousands of years to hunter-gatherer conditions, are experiencing in industrialized, urbanized environments, ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

AI detects suicide risk missed by standard assessments

Researchers at Touro University have found that an AI tool identified suicide risk that standard diagnostic tools missed. The study, published in the Journal of Personality Assessment, provides evidence that large language ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

Can you treat a narcissist?

Perhaps you know someone who always deflects blame onto you. Someone who smirks when caught in a lie, who twists your words until you're apologizing for their mistakes. And over time, you may start to wonder, can someone ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

Research reveals alarming decline in youth mental health in England

A major new report, "Understanding drivers of recent trends in young people's mental health," reveals that worsening mental health among 14–24-year-olds in England is real, widespread, and driven by identifiable social ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

What the science says about antidepressants for kids and teens

The kids are not all right. Four in 10 American high school students report prolonged feelings of sadness or hopelessness, a proxy for depression symptoms, according to a survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

Astrocytes identified as hidden culprit behind PTSD

Patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) often struggle to forget traumatic memories, even long after the danger has passed. This failure to extinguish fear memories has long puzzled scientists and posed a major ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

Increased suicide risk found among health care workers

A new study from Karolinska Institutet shows that health care workers in Sweden have a higher risk of suicide compared to other occupational groups with similar professional levels. The study highlights the risks for physicians, ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

One in 11 older Canadians has experienced depression, study finds

A new study of 3,500 Canadians aged 55 and older revealed a strong association between early childhood adversities and depression. Experiencing physical abuse in childhood was linked to a threefold increase in the likelihood ...

Psychology & Psychiatry

No clear answers on antidepressants in pregnancy

The US Food and Drug Administration recently convened a panel of experts to examine a sensitive and increasingly urgent question: should antidepressants be prescribed to women suffering from depression during pregnancy?