Families with Identical Twins Discordant for Schizophrenia:: Some Relationships between Identification, Thinking Styles, Psychopathology and Dominance-Submissiveness
Recent clinical studies of families with schizophrenic offspring have reported a variety of abnormalities, some of which—such as abnormalities of individual development, family roles and cognitive processes—appear to relate to the development of schizophrenia in a given child. The precise nature and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | British journal of psychiatry 1971-01, Vol.118 (542), p.29-42 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent clinical studies of families with schizophrenic offspring have reported a variety of abnormalities, some of which—such as abnormalities of individual development, family roles and cognitive processes—appear to relate to the development of schizophrenia in a given child. The precise nature and mechanism of these possible relationships, however, have not yet been definitively established. It is to this end that we have been studying a series of families with identical twins discordant for schizophrenia. Previous reports have described the sample, methodology, and findings with regard to life history differences between the schizophrenic and non-schizophrenic twins (Pollin
et al.,
1965, 1966), biological variables (Stabenau
et al.,
1968, 1969; Stabenau and Pollin, 1967b, 1968a), parental illness (Guggenheim
et al.,
1969), and the interaction of constitutional and psychological variables (Pollin and Stabenau, 1967, 1968, and Stabenau and Pollin, 1967a). This paper describes an attempt to further clarify the relationships among four variables in our sample of families: (a) psychopathology; (b) identification; (c) thinking and ‘cognitive’ style; and (d) dominance-submissiveness. |
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ISSN: | 0007-1250 1472-1465 |
DOI: | 10.1192/bjp.118.542.29 |