Expressed emotion and the DSM-V / Jill M. Hooley, David J. Miklowitz, and Steven R.H. Beach -- Prevention as the promotion of healthy parenting following parental divorce / Irwin N. Sandler [and others] -- Cultural and relational processes in depressed Latino adolescents / Guillermo Bernal, Eduardo Cumba-Aviløs, and Emily Sáez-Santiago -- Role of couple relationships in understanding and treating mental disorders / Mark A. Whisman -- Recommendations for research on relational disorders and processes: a roadmap for the DSM-V / David J. Miklowitz [and others].
Relational processes and mental health: a bench to bedside dialogue to guide the DSM-V / Steven R.H. Beach [and others] -- Neurobiology of the social brain: lessons from animal models about social relationships / Miranda M. Lim, Larry Young -- Refining the categorical landscape of the DSM using animal models / Nelson K. Totah, Paul Plotsky -- Marriage, health, and immune function: a review of key findings and the role of depression / Jennifer E. Graham, Lisa M. Christian, and Janice Kiecolt-Glaser -- Family expressed emotion prior to onset of psychosis / William R. McFarlane -- Genetic strategies for delineating relational taxons: defining their origins, their outcomes, and their relationships to individual psychopathology / David Reiss, Marianne Z. Wamboldt -- Childhood maltreatment and adult psychopathology: some measurement options / George W. Brown -- Taxometrics and relational processes: relevance and challenges for the next nosology of mental disorders / Theodore P. Beauchaine, Steven R.H. Beach -- Relational diagnoses: from reliable rationally-derived criteria to testable taxonic hypotheses / Richard E. Heyman, Amy M. Smith Slep -- Defining relational disorders and identifying their connections to axes I and II / Lorna Smith Benjamin, Marianne Z. Wamboldt, and Kenneth L. Critchfield.
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Seeking to integrate the large volume of clinical research on relational processes and mental health disorders with other scientific advances in psychiatry, this volume builds on exciting advances in clinical research on troubled relationships. These advances included marked improvements in the assessment and epidemiology of troubled relationships as well the use of genetics, neuroscience, and immunology to explore the importance of close relationships in clinical practice. Advances in family-based intervention, and prevention are also highlighted to help practitioners and researchers find common ground and begin an empirically based discussion about the best way to revise the DSM. Given the overwhelming research showing that relationships play a role in regulating neurobiology and genetic expression and are critical for understanding schizophrenia, conduct disorder, and depression among other disorders, relational processes must be a part of any empirically based plan for revising psychiatric nosology in DSM-V.