by Allergic to Sound | Apr 9, 2016 | Research |
Arjan Schröder, Nienke Vulink, Damiaan Denys Summary: “… We suggest that misophonia should be classified as a discrete psychiatric disorder. Diagnostic criteria could help to officially recognize the patients and the disorder, improve its identification by...
by Allergic to Sound | Apr 4, 2016 | Research |
Sukhbinder Kumar, Olana Hancock, Thomas Cope, William Sedley, Joel Winston, Timothy D Griffiths Preview: “Sounds of chewing, breathing, keyboard typing are considered by most people as ‘normal’ sounds and are ignored as background sounds in everyday...
by Allergic to Sound | Mar 11, 2016 | Research |
Rosemary E. Bernstein, Karyn L. Angell and Crystal M. Dehle Summary: “Liz came to realize that her rage was not a response to the auditory input itself as much as a reaction to an underlying core belief that her needs were not important to those close to her....
by Allergic to Sound | Mar 11, 2016 | Research |
Miren Edelstein, David Brang, Romke Rouw and Vilayanur S. Ramachandran Preview: “To date, no research has examined the neurological origin of misophonia, and preliminary investigations suggest it is not due to any primary neurological or psychological disorder...
by Allergic to Sound | Mar 11, 2016 | Research |
Krauthamer, Judith T. (April 2014) Preview: “Anger is the foremost emotional response associated with a trigger, followed by disgust. A review of 495 responses found that 99% of respondents indicated anger or rage as one of their top three emotional reactions to...
by Allergic to Sound | Mar 10, 2016 | Research |
LeDoux Lab Study Summary: “The goal of this research is to explore how the processing of auditory stimuli in the brain can go awry (leading some people have aversive reactions to stimuli that most people consider innocuous)… If results are promising, we...