Showing Results for
- All Content Types
- Magazines (13)
Search Results
- 13
Magazines
- 13
- 1From:The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (Vol. 137, Issue 3-4)Elizabeth Bear first appeared in these pages with the clever and perceptive poem "ee (doc) cummings" (T&SF, March 2003 ). Her career since that publication has included more than two dozen novels, three collections, and...
- 2From:Skeptical Inquirer (Vol. 42, Issue 3)Corticeps is a nasty but fascinating genus of fungus that burrows into the bodies and brains of insects. As fungal enzymes dissolve and disrupt neurotransmission, the infected insect's behavior is changed, and it makes...
- 3From:Skeptical Inquirer (Vol. 40, Issue 3)In a normal population, dissociative tendencies contribute to many types of paranormal thinking. Psychological dissociation, even at a subclinical level, is an important factor in the cognitive processing that leads to...
- 4From:The American Scholar (Vol. 81, Issue 3)Hans used to be overwhelmed by the voices. He heard them for hours, yelling at him, cursing him, telling him he should be dragged off into the forest and tortured and left to die. The most difficult things to grasp...
- 5From:Maclean'sThe Supreme Court of Canada has tightened rules that allow accused murderers to argue they committed their crime while in a dissociative state -- known as the automatism defence. Ruling 5 to 4 in the case of Bert Stone,...
- 6From:Psychology Today (Vol. 33, Issue 6)Dr. Marlene Steinberg Responds: "ITS THE `GOLD STANDARD'" Elizabeth Loftus' commentary on Stranger in the Mirror: Dissociation: The Hidden Epidemic illustrates the elaborate mythology and misrepresentations surrounding...
- 7From:Skeptical Inquirer (Vol. 26, Issue 3)Case histories have played a long-standing role in the history of science, medicine, and mental health. But they can mislead--especially when only half the story is told. Here's a case history about a case history that...
- 8From:Christianity Today (Vol. 45, Issue 11)Some `demons' are better left unexorcised. ANY RESPECTABLE EXORCIST has heard about--if not agonized over--dissociative identity disorder (DID), an illness that sometimes resembles demonization. Consequently, many...
- 9From:Skeptical Inquirer (Vol. 24, Issue 1)Lilienfeld, Scott O., et al. "Dissociative Identity Disorder and the Sociocognitive Model: Recalling the Lessons of the Past." Psychological Bulletin, 125(5):507-523, 1999. The authors favor using the sociocognitive...
- 10From:Maclean's (Vol. 109, Issue 21)A Calgary jury ruled that Dorothy Joudrie was in a dissociative state when she shot her estranged husband Earl Joudrie six times on Jan 21, 1995. The court ordered her to undergo psychiatric evaluation. Earl Joudrie, who...
- 11From:Science News (Vol. 139, Issue 21)Short-lived symptoms of dissociation also appear in many healthy individuals during the days following extreme distress or physical risk, report Etzel Cardena and David Spiegel of Stanford University. Within a week...
- 12From:Psychology Today (Vol. 33, Issue 6)You May Already Be Reading Memory expert Elizabeth Loftus, Ph.D., warns that psychiatrist Marlene Steinberg, M.D., in her new book Stranger in the Mirror, is trying to breathe new life into a form of therapy that...
- 13From:C: International Contemporary Art (Issue 92)"Constantly, it seemed, the experts were on the brink of deciphering the ever-growing mass of information ... the scientists [were convinced] that they were confronted with a monstrous entity endowed with reason, a...