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psychosurgery

n. the treatment of a mental disorder by surgical removal or destruction of selective brain areas. The most well-known example of psychosurgery is prefrontal lobotomy, historically used particularly for schizophrenia but also a variety of other disorders. Psychosurgery was most popular from 1935 to 1960 and is among the most controversial of all psychiatric treatments ever introduced. Contemporary psychosurgery approaches (e.g., cingulotomy) are far more precisely targeted and confined in extent than the early techniques, employing high-tech imaging and a variety of highly controllable methods of producing minute lesions. Additionally, they are used only as a last resort and only for a handful of specific psychiatric disorders—major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder—that have been resistant to other available therapies.

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Psychology term of the day

April 26th 2024

agrammatic comprehension

agrammatic comprehension

an inability to understand the meaning of sentences, even though the individual word items are understood correctly. This inability is most often apparent where sentences depart from standard word order (in English, subject–active verb–object) or are syntactically complex. The impairment is associated with conduction aphasia and agrammatism.