Hysteresis (Economics) -- Case studies : Inflation and activity : two explorations and their monetary policy implications / prepared by Olivier J. Blanchard, Eugenio Cerutti, and Lawrence Summers
Hysteria -- complications : Hysteria complicated by ecstasy : the case of Nanette Leroux / Jan Goldstein
2010
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Hysteria -- Congresses. : Hysterie et obsession : les structures cliniques de la nevrose et la direction de la cure : recueil des rapports de la quatrieme rencontre internationale, Paris, 14-17 fevrier 1986 / Fondation du champ freudien
A disorder whose predominant feature is a loss or alteration in physical functioning that suggests a physical disorder but that is actually a direct expression of a psychological conflict or need
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Hysteria -- diagnosis. : Anna O. : fourteen contemporary reinterpretations / edited by Max Rosenbaum and Melvin Muroff
Hysteria, Epidemic -- History : Observations on the nature, causes, and cure of those disorders which have been commonly called nervous, hypochondria, or hysteric: To which are prefixed some remarks on the sympathy of the nerves
Hysteria -- ethnology : A Non-Oedipal Psychoanalysis? : a Clinical Anthropology of Hysteria in the Work of Freud and Lacan / Philippe van Haute & Tomas Geyskens
Hysteria in children. : Emotional problems of childhood and adolescence : a multidisciplinary perspective / edited by Betty C. Epanchin and James L. Paul
Hysteria -- Psychosomatic aspects. : Mass psychogenic illness : a social psychological analysis / edited by Michael J. Colligan, James W. Pennebaker, Lawrence R. Murphy
Hysteria -- therapy : A Non-Oedipal Psychoanalysis? : a Clinical Anthropology of Hysteria in the Work of Freud and Lacan / Philippe van Haute & Tomas Geyskens
A disorder whose predominant feature is a loss or alteration in physical functioning that suggests a physical disorder but that is actually a direct expression of a psychological conflict or need
Pathologic partial or complete loss of the ability to recall past experiences (AMNESIA, RETROGRADE) or to form new memories (AMNESIA, ANTEROGRADE). This condition may be of organic or psychologic origin. Organic forms of amnesia are usually associated with dysfunction of the DIENCEPHALON or HIPPOCAMPUS. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp426-7)
Pathologic partial or complete loss of the ability to recall past experiences (AMNESIA, RETROGRADE) or to form new memories (AMNESIA, ANTEROGRADE). This condition may be of organic or psychologic origin. Organic forms of amnesia are usually associated with dysfunction of the DIENCEPHALON or HIPPOCAMPUS. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp426-7)