4.7 Article

Composition of yoga-philosophy based mental traits (Gunas) in major psychiatric disorders: A trans-diagnostic approach

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Psychiatry

Cognitive Rigidity, Habitual Tendencies, and Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms: Individual Differences and Compensatory Interactions

Smriti Ramakrishnan et al.

Summary: Recent studies have shown that cognitive inflexibility and habitual compulsivity are independent predictors of subclinical OCD symptoms in healthy populations, and there is an interaction between these two traits. These findings imply that it is important to consider interactions between psychological traits when studying the endophenotype of OCD symptoms.

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY (2022)

Article Integrative & Complementary Medicine

Comparing cognition, coping skills and vedic personality of individuals practicing yoga, physical exercise or sedentary lifestyle: a cross-sectional fMRI study

Harsimarpreet Kaur et al.

Summary: In this study, individuals practicing different lifestyles showed no significant differences in cognition, but did show differences in coping styles and vedic personality inventory. Yoga practitioners had higher Sattva scores, while physical activity group had higher Rajas and Tamas scores. Additionally, yoga practitioners recruited brain areas associated with self-regulation and inhibitory control.

INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE RESEARCH (2022)

Article Psychiatry

GHQ score changes from teenage to young adulthood

Adrian Furnham et al.

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH (2019)

Article Management

Whence, how and when psychological capital enhances job performance: Insights from an east-west conceptual synthesis

V. Venkatanagarajan et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CROSS CULTURAL MANAGEMENT (2019)

Article Psychiatry

Culturally responsive integrated health care: Key issues for medical education

Rose Anne C. Illes et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY IN MEDICINE (2015)

Article Psychology

Thought-action fusion and inflated responsibility beliefs in obsessive-compulsive disorder

Emily Marie O'Leary et al.

Clinical Psychologist (2009)