A New Intellectual Framework for Psychiatry
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in American Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 155 (4) , 457-469
- https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.155.4.457
Abstract
In an attempt to place psychiatric thinking and the training of future psychiatrists more centrally into the context of modern biology, the author outlines the beginnings of a new intellectual framework for psychiatry that derives from current biological thinking about the relationship of mind to brain. The purpose of this framework is twofold. First, it is designed to emphasize that the professional requirements for future psychiatrists will demand a greater knowledge of the structure and functioning of the brain than is currently available in most training programs. Second, it is designed to illustrate that the unique domain which psychiatry occupies within academic medicine, the analysis of the interaction between social and biological determinants of behavior, can best be studied by also having a full understanding of the biological components of behavior.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Systematic Changes in Cerebral Glucose Metabolic Rate After Successful Behavior Modification Treatment of Obsessive-Compulsive DisorderArchives of General Psychiatry, 1996
- Structural Changes Accompanying Memory StorageAnnual Review of Physiology, 1993
- Functional reorganization of primary somatosensory cortex in adult owl monkeys after behaviorally controlled tactile stimulationJournal of Neurophysiology, 1990
- The Adopted-Away Offspring of SchizophrenicsAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1971
- The Genetics of Schizophrenic and Schizoid DiseaseScience, 1970
- Biochemical Theories of SchizophreniaScience, 1959
- Sickle Cell Anemia, a Molecular DiseaseScience, 1949
- Notes on the Development of Treatment of Schizophrenics by Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy†Psychiatry: Interpersonal & Biological Processes, 1948