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  2. Childhood schizophrenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Childhood_schizophrenia

    "First degree relatives" are found to have the highest chance of being diagnosed with schizophrenia. Children of individuals with schizophrenia have a 8.2% chance of having schizophrenia while the general population is at an 0.86% chance of having this disorder. [28] These results indicate that genes play a big role in one developing schizophrenia.

  3. Epigenetics of schizophrenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epigenetics_of_schizophrenia

    Schizophrenia is a debilitating and often misunderstood disorder that affects up to 1% of the world's population. [1] Although schizophrenia is a heavily studied disorder, it has remained largely impervious to scientific understanding; epigenetics offers a new avenue for research, understanding, and treatment.

  4. Expressed emotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expressed_emotion

    Expressed emotion (EE), is a measure of the family environment that is based on how the relatives of a psychiatric patient spontaneously talk about the patient. [1] It specifically measures three to five aspects of the family environment: the most important are critical comments, hostility, emotional over-involvement, with positivity and warmth sometimes also included as indications of a low ...

  5. Interactionism (nature versus nurture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interactionism_(nature...

    Children with genetic risks (such as having a genetic schizophrenia mother) were more sensitive to negative child-raring styles than those with no genetic risk. They are more likely to develop schizophrenia in undesirable child-raring style families. [21] This suggests the role of genetic factors in the development of schizophrenia.

  6. Theodore Lidz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Lidz

    The other hypothesis, which has an unknown cause, is the capacity to think in minimal-educated families where the children in these families are more likely to have schizophrenic reactions. [ 2 ] In their book, Schizophrenia and the Family (1965), Lidz, Fleck and Alice Cornelison compiled findings of what remains perhaps the most detailed ...

  7. Jwoww Opens Up About Navigating Her Childhood amid Mother's ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/jwoww-opens-navigating-her...

    “Nobody knows but I will say it's schizophrenia,” she responds. “My mom was a schizophrenic too,” Bunnie chimes in before JWoww questions if she talks about it publicly. “Yeah, I've been ...

  8. Risk factors of schizophrenia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_factors_of_schizophrenia

    Several long-term studies found that individuals born with congenital visual impairment do not develop schizophrenia, suggesting a protective effect. [96] [97] The effects of estrogen in schizophrenia have been studied in view of the association between the onset of menopause in women who develop schizophrenia at this time. Add-on estrogen ...

  9. Paranoid-schizoid and depressive positions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paranoid-schizoid_and...

    In object relations theory, the paranoid-schizoid position is a state of mind of children, from birth to four or six months of age. Melanie Klein [2] has described the earliest stages of infantile psychic life in terms of a successful completion of development through certain positions. A position, for Klein, is a set of psychic functions that ...