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  1. An informative and comprehensive review from the leading researchers in the field, this book provides a complete one-stop guide to neuroimaging techniques and their application to a wide range of neuropsychiatric disorders.

  2. 4 de ene. de 2024 · The paper explores developing multidisciplinary care approaches, highlighting successful collaborations between neurologists and psychiatrists. This study examines the difficulties in carrying out a plan and the process of identifying obstacles to combining different elements.

  3. Abstract. Major neuropsychiatric disorders such as psychosis are increasingly acknowledged to be disorders of brain connectivity. Yet, tools to map, model, predict, and change connectivity are difficult to develop, largely due to the complex, dynamic, and multivariate nature of interactions between brain regions.

  4. 1 de ene. de 2014 · This article reviews the history and development of neuropsychiatry in the occidental world, and suggests that the science of neuropsychiatry could enable the optimization of modern technologies for the diagnosis, monitoring, and treatment of behavioral, cognitive, and so-called mental disorders.

  5. Neuropsychiatrists manage the traditionally-conceptualizedpsychiatricmanifestations of disorders of the central nervous system – these are often interpreted as disorders manifesting behavioral, emotional, cognitive and/or perceptual dysfunction in addition to the sensorimotor and language abnormalities of other neurologic disorders.

  6. This chapter reviews imaging studies delineating the unique neuropsychiatric features of Williams-Beuren syndrome (WS), as well as recent advances in investigating the neural substrates of the disorder, which have provided significant contributions to unraveling the impact of a specific genetic defect on brain structure and function.

  7. Abstract. Major neuropsychiatric disorders such as psychosis are increasingly acknowledged to be disorders of brain connectivity. Yet tools to map, model, predict, and change connectivity are difficult to develop, largely because of the complex, dynamic, and multivariate nature of interactions between brain regions.