Littrell, Jill

Neuroscience for psychologists and other mental health professionals: promoting well-being and treating mental illness - New York : Springer Publishing Company, 2015 - xviii, 426 p. : illustrations (black and white, and colour) ; 23 cm.

This book presents the latest neuroscience and physiological explanations behind the major diagnostic categories of mental illness--including schizophrenia, depression, anxiety, and addiction--and explains the physiological bases that underlie traditional pharmaceutical treatment interventions. Crucially, it integrates current information about brain function with new research on immunology, offering a research-based rationale for viewing the mind and the body as an intergrated system. The new information on the physiological bases for behavior explains how lifestyle interventions related to diet, exercise, and interpersonal relationships can have dramatic therapeutic effects on mental health. Of particular note in this book is cutting-edge information on fast-spiking GABA interneurons and the role of NMDA receptors in psychosis, the role of inflmmatory processes in mood disorders, and gut microbiota's influence on inflammation. Beyond the physiology undergirding distress, the book also explores the physiological bases for health and resilence. Students and mental health professionals in social work, counseling, and psychology will learn how the same mechanisms available for overcoming mental anguish can be utilized for achieving life satisfaction.

9780826122780


Mental illness - Diagnosis
Mental illness - Physiological aspects
Neurosciences - Psychological aspects
Central Nervous System
Well-being

WM140 / LIT