Pioneers in schizophrenia research, Eugen Bleuler and Emil Kraepelin - Schizophrenia is a complex syndrome characterized by cognitive functions and emotional dysfunction such as delusions, hallucinations, speech disorders, behavior disorders, inappropriate emotions. As this disease can not be cured, clinicians rely on the DSM IV to distinguish between symptoms. The symptoms of this disease can confuse human recognition, thinking, speech and movement in almost all aspects of everyday functions.
From the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, Emil Kleberin and Eugen Buller proposed the first concept of schizophrenia. Kreperin defines the original term "dementia" of schizophrenia as an intrinsic psychosis characterized by mental retardation (dementia) and play cocks. The main symptoms of disease in Krupelin include negativity, hallucinations, delusions, stereotypes, difficulty with attention, and emotional dysfunction. Kraepelin's research focuses on descriptions and phenomenology, allowing subsequent researchers to investigate the cause of the disease.
Pioneers in schizophrenia research, Eugen Bleuler and Emil Kraepelin - Schizophrenia is a complex syndrome characterized by cognitive functions and emotional dysfunction such as delusions, hallucinations, speech disorders, behavior disorders, inappropriate emotions. As this disease can not be cured, clinicians rely on the DSM IV to distinguish between symptoms. - The progress since the Middle Ages has brought a completely new world of complex inventions and ideas. Accepting new knowledge and improvements can only result from the Renaissance way. This new era has opened the way for change. The pioneers of the Renaissance have changed the various aspects of daily life by advancing technology and creating ideas and have taken the first steps in the development of the new era. As a result, a new frontier for future inventions was born.
Since the early nineteenth century schizophrenia has been regarded as a mental illness. It was explained by Emile Kreperin in 1883 as dementia, or a premature decrease in the brain. It is considered incurable and unstoppable. At that time, few people were diagnosed with dementia. Because symptoms of this symptom are small, especially because they were thought to be symptoms of this disease. Years later, Eugen Buller produced the term schizophrenia. It means literally "split thinking". Bleuler believes that because there is no psychological connection between thought, language, emotion, memory, problem solving, their heart breaks and causes mental failure.