Systematic reviews of categorical versus continuum models in psychosis: evidence for discontinuous subpopulations underlying a psychometric continuum. Implications for DSM-V, DSM-VI, and DSM-VII.

@article{Linscott2010SystematicRO,
  title={Systematic reviews of categorical versus continuum models in psychosis: evidence for discontinuous subpopulations underlying a psychometric continuum. Implications for DSM-V, DSM-VI, and DSM-VII.},
  author={Richard J. Linscott and Jim van os},
  journal={Annual review of clinical psychology},
  year={2010},
  volume={6},
  pages={
          391-419
        }
}
  • R. Linscott, J. van os
  • Published 24 March 2010
  • Psychology, Medicine
  • Annual review of clinical psychology
Diagnostic systems, phenotype models, and theories of etiology incorporate propositions on the underlying nature of psychosis and schizophrenia phenotypes. These propositions, whether implicit or explicit, are that the distributions of the phenotypes, or the phenotype experiences themselves, are dimensional or categorical. On one hand, evidence on the epidemiology of schizophrenia phenotypes suggests symptom phenotypes may not be bound by conventional diagnostic thresholds but instead may blend… 
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