
Bruce Bongar (ed.)
et al.
Published online:
01 June 2015
Published in print:
01 September 2006
Online ISBN:
9780190242275
Print ISBN:
9780195172492
Contents
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Predictors of Pathological Responses Predictors of Pathological Responses
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Differentiating Normal from Pathological Responses in the First Weeks Following Exposure Differentiating Normal from Pathological Responses in the First Weeks Following Exposure
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Identifying Those at Greater Risk Identifying Those at Greater Risk
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Biological Markers Differentiating Normal From Pathological Responses to Trauma Biological Markers Differentiating Normal From Pathological Responses to Trauma
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Limitations in the Use of Behavioral and Biological Markers for Risk Profiling, Diagnosis, and Prognosis of PTSD Following Terrorist Acts Limitations in the Use of Behavioral and Biological Markers for Risk Profiling, Diagnosis, and Prognosis of PTSD Following Terrorist Acts
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Research Priorities in Mental Health Consequences of Terrorism Research Priorities in Mental Health Consequences of Terrorism
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References References
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Chapter
19 Neurobiological and Behavioral Consequences of Terrorism: Distinguishing Normal From Pathological Responses, Risk Profiling, and Optimizing Resilience
Get access
Pages
273–287
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Published:September 2006
Cite
Yehuda, Rachel, and others, 'Neurobiological and Behavioral Consequences of Terrorism: Distinguishing Normal From Pathological Responses, Risk Profiling, and Optimizing Resilience', in Bruce Bongar, and others (eds), Psychology of Terrorism (New York , 2006; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 June 2015), https://doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780195172492.003.0019, accessed 4 May 2025.
Abstract
Chapter 19 discusses neurobiological and behavioral consequences of terrorism, predictors of pathological responses, differentiating normal from pathological responses in the first weeks following exposure, identifying those at greater risk, biological markers differentiation normal from pathological responses to trauma, limitations in the use of behavioral and biological markers for risk profiling, diagnosis, and prognosis of PTSD following terrorist acts, and research priorities in mental health consequences of terrorism.
Keywords:
psychology of terrorism, neurobiological consequences, behavioral consequences, pathological responses, biological markers, trauma, PTSD, terrorism
Subject
Clinical Psychology
Collection:
Oxford Clinical Psychology
© Oxford University Press
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