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The Neuroscience of Suicidal Behavior
Contrary to common belief, suicide is preventable and insights from neuroscientific research show how.
Kees van Heeringen (Author)
9781107148949, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 23 August 2018
286 pages, 29 b/w illus. 4 tables
23.6 x 15.7 x 1.7 cm, 0.59 kg
'… van Heeringen has made the neuroscience of suicide accessible, understandable, non-intimidating, reader-friendly, and actually rather interesting …' Alan L. Berman, The Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention
Nearly one million people take their own lives each year world-wide - however, contrary to popular belief, suicide can be prevented. While suicide is commonly thought to be an understandable reaction to severe stress, it is actually an abnormal reaction to regular situations. Something more than unbearable stress is needed to explain suicide, and neuroscience shows what this is, how it is caused and how it can be treated. Professor Kees van Heeringen describes findings from neuroscientific research on suicide, using various approaches from population genetics to brain imaging. Compelling evidence is reviewed that shows how and why genetic characteristics or early traumatic experiences may lead to a specific predisposition that makes people vulnerable to triggering life events. Neuroscientific studies are yielding results that provide insight into how the risk of suicide may develop; ultimately demonstrating how suicide can be prevented.
1. What is suicidal behavior, and can it be prevented?
2. Stress, vulnerability, and suicide: the stress-diathesis model
3. The dark side of the brain: neuroscience approaches to suicidal behavior
4. Lethal signals: the molecular neuroscience of suicidal behavior
5. I think, therefore I do not want to be: the cognitive neuroscience of suicidal behavior
6. Images of the suicidal brain: systems neuroscience and suicide
7. In my end is my beginning: a developmental neuroscience perspective of suicidal behavior
8. I predict, therefore I cannot be: a predictive coding account of suicidal behavior
9. Predicting the unpredictable: the contribution of neuroscience to suicide prediction
10. The treatment of suicide risk: neuroscience aspects.
Subject Areas: Popular psychology [VSP], Clinical psychology [MMJ], Cognition & cognitive psychology [JMR], Psychology: emotions [JMQ], Abnormal psychology [JMP], Occupational & industrial psychology [JMJ], Social, group or collective psychology [JMH], Analytical & Jungian psychology [JMAJ], Psychoanalytical theory [Freudian psychology JMAF], Psychology [JM]