List of Figures and Tables
List of Contributors
Part I: Prologue
1: Peter Zachar and Assen Jablensky: Introduction: The concept of
validation in psychiatry and psychology
Part II: Matters More Philosophical
2: Massimiliano Aragona: Rethinking received views on the history
of psychiatric nosology: minor shifts, major continuities
3: Adriano C. T. Rodrigues and Claudio E. M. Banzato: Reality and
utility unbound: an argument for dual-track nosologic
validation
4: Dominic Murphy: Validity, realism, and normativity
5: Nigel Sabbarton-Leary, Lisa Bortolotti, and Matthew R. Broome:
Natural and para-natural kinds in psychiatry
6: Jared W. Keeley: The background assumptions of measurement
practices in psychological assessment and psychiatric diagnosis
7: Ivana S. Marková and German E. Berrios: Neuroimaging in
psychiatry: epistemological considerations
8: Drozdstoj St. Stoyanov, Stefan J. Borgwardt and Somogy Varga:
Translational validity across neuroscience and psychiatry
9: Michael Loughlin and Andrew Miles: Psychiatry, objectivity, and
realism about value
Part III: Matters (Slightly) More Clinical
10: James Phillips: Scientific validity in psychiatry: necessarily
a moving target?
11: Kathryn L. Jacobs and Robert F. Krueger: The importance of
structural validity
12: C. Robert Cloninger: Validation of psychiatric classifications:
the psychobiological model of personality as an exemplar
13: Juan E. Mezzich and Ihsan M. Salloum: Person-centered
integrative diagnosis: bases, models and guides
14: René J. Muller: The four domains of mental illness (FDMI): an
alternative to the DSM-5
Part IV: Epilogue
15: Drozdstoj St. Stoyanov and Massimiliano Aragona: United in
diversity: Are there convergent models of psychiatric validation?
Peter Zachar graduated from Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa with
degrees in philosophy and psychology. After doing volunteer work in
the inner city of Chicago, he returned to graduate school and
completed a Ph.D. in psychology at Southern Illinois University. He
worked for two years as an agency psychologist in a rural community
mental health center before obtaining an academic position at
Auburn University Montgomery in 1995. Promoted to Full Professor in
2005, he
served eight years as Chair of the Department of Psychology from
2003 to 2011. His primary area of scholarship is philosophical
issues in psychiatric classification. Zachar has authored two books
-
Psychological Concepts and Biological Psychiatry - A Philosophical
Analysis (John Benjamins, 2000) and A Metaphysics of
Psychopathology (MIT Press, 2014).
Drozdstoj (Drossi) Stoyanov was born on July, 20th 1980 in Sofia,
Bulgaria. He graduated from the high school in 1996 and received
his MD from the Medical University of Sofia in 2002. He presented a
PhD thesis in the field of theory and methodology of neuroscience
in 2005; certified in December 2007 by the Government Specialty
Board with the rank of Psychiatrist and awarded Postgraduate
Certificate in Philosophy of Mental Health from the University of
Central Lancashire, United Kingdom in
October 2010.
Dr Stoyanov was tenured as Associate Professor in the Medical
University of Plovdiv in 2008 and hold the position of Vice Dean
for International Affairs of its Faculty of Public Health from 2009
to 2011; since 2011 appointed in the Faculty of Medicine,
Department of Psychiatry and Medical Psychology and Special Advisor
Strategic Partnerships to the Vice Rector.
Massimiliano Aragona:
1994: University Degree in Medicine, Sapienza University, Rome
(Italy)
1998: Post-graduate degree in Psychiatry, Sapienza University, Rome
(Italy)
1999: Inscription in the list of Psychotherapists, Reggio Calabria
(Italy)
2004: University Degree in Philosophy, Sapienza University, Rome
(Italy)
Since 2000: Psychiatrist of the Italian National Health Service,
since 2005 clinical and scientific director of the Day
Hospitalization Service for Eating Disorders of the ASL RMD, Rome,
Italy
Since 2004 Professor at the Faculty of Philosophy, Sapienza
University, Rome (Italy)
Since 2012 Professor at the S. Andrea Hospital School of
Psychiatry, Sapienza University, Rome (Italy) Assen Jablensky, MD,
is Winthrop Professor of Psychiatry at The University of Western
Australia in Perth and Consultant Psychiatrist at Royal Perth
Hospital. From 1975 to 1987, he held a senior position with the
World Health Organization in Geneva, where he was Co-Principal
Investigator of the influential WHO Ten-Country Study of
Schizophrenia and one of the leading experts in the development
of the ICD-10 classification of mental disorders. Currently he is a
member of the WHO International Advisory Group for the revision of
the ICD-10 classification of mental disorders. The main focus
of
his research is on psychiatric epidemiology, genetics, and
classification of mental disorders. Prof Jablensky has over 350
publications, of which 172 are articles in peer-reviewed research
journals.
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