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  2. Ways to treat disorganized thinking, other than pharmacotherapy

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/10455

    Disorganized thinking is a cognitive deficit symptomatic of thought disorders such as schizophrenia. This affects your ability to process and connect thoughts and ideas, rendering them disorganized, and fragmented. In extreme cases, disorganized speech results. Are there any activities that have a therapeutic effect and remedy this somewhat?

  3. What is the biological reason behind disorganized thinking and...

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/8730/what-is-the-biological-reason...

    Having disorganized thinking is different for everyone. But, it is sometimes described as not being able to connect thoughts together. I am asking about disorganized thinking other than communication problems. To be more specific, disorganized thinking, relating to the thoughts one forms, that causes disorganized behavior.

  4. schizophrenia - How big is the risk of schizophrenic delusion...

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/29790/how-big-is-the-risk-of...

    Disorganized Thinking: Individuals may have difficulty organizing their thoughts, leading to incoherent speech and difficulty expressing themselves logically. Disorganized or Abnormal Motor Behavior: This can manifest as unpredictable and inappropriate movements, agitation, catatonia (lack of movement or response), or repetitive actions.

  5. Difference between psychosis and schizophrenia

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/23349/difference-between-psychosis-and...

    an umbrella term for a clinical presentation conceptualized, both by the American Psychiatric Association [APA] and the World Health Organization [WHO], as a combination of hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thinking or behaviour, negative or catatonic symptoms, and functional impairment.

  6. Newest 'unconscious' Questions - Psychology & Neuroscience Stack...

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/tagged/unconscious

    Having disorganized thinking is different for everyone. But, it is sometimes described as not being able to connect thoughts together. I am asking about disorganized thinking other than communication ...

  7. cognitive psychology - Bottom up thinking - what is it? -...

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/21525/bottom-up-thinking-what-is-it

    Imaginative, original, and non-linear, it is “bottom-up” thinking, in which insights percolate into the mind, seemingly from nowhere. Another unclear quote: Elastic thinking is about stretching your mind and using ‘bottom up’ processing in the brain rather than the top down executive functions that drive analytical thinking.

  8. cognitive psychology - What is the neurophysiology of a thought...

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/20147/what-is-the-neurophysiology-of-a...

    This paper Thinking in circuits reviews this matter in detail, and its references can provide more related scientific evidence. Question: What is the neurophysiology of a thought? I think the following papers can provide some current information about the neurophysiology of thought: 1.How neurons make meaning. 2.Brain Networks and Cognitive ...

  9. What are biological primary mathematical skills?

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/630

    What is the biological reason behind disorganized thinking and disorganized behavior in thought disorders? 20 What is the primary source of the "mount stupid" graphic?

  10. Can hypomania be induced by just thinking quickly and variably?

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/3433/can-hypomania-be-induced-by-just...

    Is it possible to clinically induce hypomania by just thinking quickly and variably? Note that an easy exercise to implement this would be to think of a word and then a word beginning with the previous word's letter. Added. In a sense, the above exercise is "anti-meditation." Mindfulness is essentially low thought speed combined with high ...

  11. cognitive psychology - Is psychotherapy more effective when...

    psychology.stackexchange.com/questions/4319

    Free association is an integral part of depth psychological therapy (such as psychoanalysis), which is still prevalent around the world (e.g. in Germany depth psychological therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy are the only two therapies paid for by health insurance).