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Michael Broome

University of Virginia
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  • University of Virginia
    Graduate student
Charlottesville, Virginia, United States of America
  • All publications (5)
  • Imaging and delusions
    with P. K. McGuire
    In D. Freeman, R. P. Bentall & P. A. Garety (eds.), Persecutory Delusions: Assessment, Theory, and Treatment, Oxford University Press. 2008.
  •  63
    Charting New Phenomenological Paths for Empirical Research on Delusions: Embracing Complexity, Finding Meaning
    with R. Ritunnano and G. Stanghellini
    JAMA Psychiatry 78 (10): 1063-1064. 2021.
    Delusions
  • Delusion formation and reasoning biases in those at clinical high risk for psychosis
    with L. C. Johns, I. Valli, J. B. Woolley, P. Tabraham, C. Brett, L. Valmaggia, E. Peters, P. A. Garety, and P. K. McGuire
    British Journal of Psychiatry. Supplement 51 (51). 2007.
    Delusions
  •  46
    Finding order within the disorder: a case study exploring the meaningfulness of delusions
    with R. Ritunnano and C. Humpston
    BJPsych Bulletin. 2021.
    Can delusions, in the context of psychosis, enhance a person’s sense of meaningfulness? The case described here suggests that, in some circumstances, they can. This prompts further questions into the complexities of delusion as a lived phenomenon, with important implications for the clinical encounter. While assumptions of meaninglessness are often associated with concepts of ’disorder’, ’harm’ and ’dysfunction’, we suggest that meaning can nonetheless be found within what is commonly taken to b…Read more
    Can delusions, in the context of psychosis, enhance a person’s sense of meaningfulness? The case described here suggests that, in some circumstances, they can. This prompts further questions into the complexities of delusion as a lived phenomenon, with important implications for the clinical encounter. While assumptions of meaninglessness are often associated with concepts of ’disorder’, ’harm’ and ’dysfunction’, we suggest that meaning can nonetheless be found within what is commonly taken to be incomprehensible or even meaningless. A phenomenological and value-based approach appears indispensable for clinicians facing the seemingly paradoxical coexistence of harmfulness and meaningfulness.
    Delusions
  •  1
    Reasoning styles and delusions in early psychosis
    with C. Brett, L. C. Johns, J. Woolley, E. Peters, P. Garety, and P. K. McGuire
    Schizophrenia Research 60 (1). 2003.
    Delusions
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