
Human psychological stability depends not only on memory, identity, or emotion, but on a largely invisible assumption: the belief that one can return. Return to a previous mental state, return...

Human psychological stability depends not only on memory, identity, or emotion, but on a largely invisible assumption: the belief that one can return. Return to a previous mental state, return...

In psychiatry, motor inhibition is usually associated with depression, catatonia, or neurological disease. Patients move slowly, speak less, or appear physically constrained. Far less recognized is a condition in which...

Psychiatry often conceptualizes psychosis as a break from reality characterized by false beliefs, hallucinations, or disorganized thought. Far less attention is given to a subtle but clinically significant state that...

Psychiatric literature often assumes that emotional flattening is accompanied by cognitive decline, psychosis, or neurological damage. However, a rarely examined condition exists in which emotional experience fades or disappears while...

Psychiatry traditionally treats time distortion as a secondary symptom—something that appears in depression, mania, trauma, or psychosis. Slowed time in melancholia, accelerated time in mania, or frozen time in trauma...

Modern psychiatry places great emphasis on insight, self-reflection, and narrative coherence. Patients are encouraged to understand their past, articulate their emotions, and construct meaningful personal stories. Yet an underrecognized pathological...

In classical psychiatry, vigilance is often treated as a neutral or even adaptive cognitive function: the capacity to remain alert to relevant stimuli, detect threats, and update beliefs accordingly. However,...

Cognitive emptiness with preserved intelligence is one of the most misunderstood states in psychopathology. It is not intellectual decline, dementia, confusion, or low intelligence. The individual can reason, calculate, speak...

Volition is the felt experience of being the initiator of one’s own actions. It is not merely movement or decision-making, but the internal conviction that “this action originates from me.”...

Perceptual trust is the quiet, automatic confidence that what one sees, hears, feels, and senses corresponds—at least approximately—to reality. It is not the belief that perception is perfect, but the...
Role conflict occurs when an individual faces incompatible demands attached to different social roles they occupy. Each person plays multiple roles—such as employee, parent, partner, student, friend—and these roles come with specific expectations and responsibilities. When these expectations clash, they create psychological tension and stress.
At Famout, we are passionate about quality, innovation, and excellence.
24/7 Support
Subscribe for latest products
© 2024 Famout