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The Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics |
By Bruce D. Perry and Erin P. Hambrick Going beyond the medical model, The Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics maps the neurobiological development of maltreated children. Assessment identifies developmental challenges and relationships which contribute to risk or resiliency. READ MORE
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The Contribution of Early Traumatic Events to Schizophrenia in Some Patients: A Traumagenic Neurodevelopmental Model |
By John Read, Bruce D. Perry, Andrew Moskowitz, and Jan Connolly The current diathesis-stress model of schizophrenia proposes that a genetic deficit creates a predisposing vulnerability in the form of oversensitivity to stress. READ MORE
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A Study and Overview of Anxiety Disorders by Sanjeev Pathak, MD and Bruce D. Perry, MD, Ph.D. READ MORE
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Homeostasis, Stress, Trauma, and Adaptation |
A Neurodevelopmental View of Childhood Trauma by Bruce D. Perry, MD., Ph.D., and Ronnie Pollard, MD READ MORE
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Examining Child Maltreatment Through a Neurodevelopmental Lens: Clinical Applications of the Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics |
Journal of Loss and Trauma, 14:240-255, 2009, Bruce D. Perry This article provides the theoretical rationale and overview of a neurodevelopmentally-informed approach to therapeutic work with maltreated and traumatized children and youth. READ MORE
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Childhood Trauma, the Neurobiology of Adaptation, and "Use-dependent" Development of the Brain: How "States" Become "Traits" |
Infant Mental Health Journal, Vol. 16, No.4, Winter 1995 Bruce D. Perry, Ronnie A. Pollard, Toi L. Blakley, and Domenico Vigilante READ MORE
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Teachers serve as a crucial emotional bridge for a child at times of loss. What do we need to know to help students cope? READ MORE
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Columbine, Killing and You |
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Experts in crime, mental health, education, and social sciences have all been trying to understand the pathways to school violence. A few common observations emerge. The first, and most disturbing, is that human beings, like few other species, are pervasively aggressive, violent and murderous to each other. The major predators of humans are other humans. READ MORE |
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