| psychopharmacology |
the use of drugs that affect the psyche or personality.
Ãâó: www.sfaf.org/treatment/beta/b29/b29glos.html
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| psychotherapy |
Therapy involving psychological instead of medical treatment of mental disorders. It can include supportive dialogue, counseling, and cognitive behavioral approaches to achieve a thinking-feeling reorganization.
Ãâó: www.indianpsychiatry.com/Glossary.htm
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| psychogenic |
having an emotional or psychologic origin.
Ãâó: www.uwo.ca/pathol/glossary.html
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| psychomotor |
Voluntary movements; also applied to gross developmental milestones which implies that there are normal tasks that children are able to do by a certain age.
Ãâó: www.lsdn.com/glance_glossary.shtml
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| psychology |
In philosophy, the systematic study of mind, as opposed to physics or the study of matter. Applied in theosophy to the attributes, qualities, and powers of the human intermediate nature, contrasted with physiology. In ancient times psychology was the science of soul; and this science being the causative, and physiology the effective or consequential, no one was considered an informed or expert physiologist who was not previously trained in psychology. ...
Ãâó: www.theosociety.org/pasadena/etgloss/pro-pz.htm
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