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SUMMARY:Voices and Thoughts in Psychosis
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DESCRIPTION:<p>Voices and Thoughts in Psychosis<br> <br> Special Issue of the Review of Philosophy and Psychology<br> <br> Auditory-verbal hallucinations (AVHs)\, namely\, hearing voices in the absence<br> of a speaker\, are a common symptom of psychosis affecting approximately 75<br> percent of patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. By far the most<br> popular approach in recent decades has been to explain AVH in terms of a<br> problem with self-monitoring\, whereby self-produced phenomena are badly<br> monitored and therefore misattributed to an external source.<br> <br> Contemporary research in voice hearing is starting to depart from this<br> orthodoxy in exciting ways. One source of change comes from the fact that<br> theorists in psychology and philosophy have been interacting more with<br> clinicians\, patients and even activists\, and thereby recognising the<br> complexity and heterogeneity of voice hearing.<br> <br> One upshot of this complexity is that it raises questions about the<br> difference between voice hearing and thoughts that feel inserted or alien in<br> some way. Since some voices are reported as &ldquo\;soundless&rdquo\; or &ldquo\;very much like<br> thoughts&rdquo\;\, it is by no means clear that the distinction simply depends on<br> presence of auditory phenomenology. More work needs to be done on the<br> relationship between AVH and thought insertion. The self-monitoring approach<br> has tended to simply view both as misattributed inner speech.<br> <br> The purpose of this special issue is to unite philosophers\, psychologists<br> and neuroscientists in order to further our understanding of voice hearing<br> and thought insertion. We particularly welcome submissions that seek to<br> clarify or question the difference between AVH and thought insertion.<br> <br> Potential issues to be addressed include but are not restricted to:<br> &bull\; The relationship between AVH and thought insertion<br> &bull\; The relationship between inner speech and thought<br> &bull\; What AVH and/or thought insertion can tell us about audition and/or<br> thought<br> &bull\; Overlooked phenomenological aspects of voice-hearing and/or thought<br> insertion<br> &bull\; The meaning of &ldquo\;a voice&rdquo\; in subjective reports of &ldquo\;hearing a voice&rdquo\;<br> &bull\; The role of communicative content in AVH and/or thought insertion<br> &bull\; What clinical and non-clinical variations in AVH can tell us about voices<br> and thoughts in psychosis<br> &bull\; New or integrative models of voice-hearing and/or thought insertion<br> &bull\; Mechanisms or subjective grounds underpinning the ownership of<br> thoughts/voices<br> &bull\; Implications of thought insertion and AVH for epistemological issues like<br> self-knowledge and privileged access<br> &bull\; The relationship between inserted thoughts\, norms of rationality\, and<br> theories of delusion<br> <br> Guest Editors<br> Sam Wilkinson (Durham University)<br> Ben Alderson-Day (Durham University)<br> <br> Invited Contributors<br> Johanna Badcock (University of Western Australia)<br> Frank Lar&oslash\;i (University of Liege)<br> Johannes Roessler (University of Warwick)<br> <br> Schedule<br> Submission Deadline: October 17\, 2014<br> <br> How to submit<br> Prospective authors should register at: <a target="_blank">http://www.editorialmanager.com/ropp</a><br> to obtain a login and select "Voices and Thoughts in Psychosis" as an<br> article type.<br> <br> Manuscripts should be approximately 8\,000 words. Submissions should follow<br> the author guidelines available on the journal's website.<br> <br> About the journal<br> The Review of Philosophy and Psychology (ISSN: 1878-5158\; eISSN: 1878-5166)<br> is a peer reviewed journal published quarterly by Springer and focusing on<br> philosophical and foundational issues in cognitive science. The aim of the<br> journal is to provide a forum for discussion on topics of mutual interest to<br> philosophers and psychologists and to foster interdisciplinary research at<br> the crossroads of philosophy and the sciences of the mind\, including the<br> neural\, behavioural and social sciences. The journal publishes theoretical<br> works grounded in empirical research as well as empirical articles on issues<br> of philosophical relevance. It includes thematic issues featuring invited<br> contributions from leading authors together with articles answering a call<br> for paper.<br> <br> Contact<br> For any queries\, please email the guest editors:<br> <a href="mailto:sam.wilkinson@durham.ac.uk">sam.wilkinson@durham.ac.uk</a><br> <a href="mailto:benjamin.alderson-day@durham.ac.uk">benjamin.alderson-day@durham.ac.uk</a></p>
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