Browsing by Author "Ağargün, Mehmet Yücel"
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Do prescription hypnotic medications increase or decrease suicidality? COMMENT
Ağargün, Mehmet Yücel; Ateş, Sema (American Academy of Sleep Medicine, 2021)There has been a growing interest in the association of sleep disturbances with suicidality for 4 decades. Epidemiological and clinical research show that insomnia, hypersomnia, and nightmares are independent risk factors ... -
Electrophysiological correlates of critical-analytical thinking and executive functioning
Runyun, Şerife Leman (İstanbul Medipol Üniversitesi Sağlık Bilimleri Enstitüsü, 2018)Critical thinking can be defined as purposeful and reasoned thinking that includes problem solving, decision making, estimating probabilities and formulating conclusions while using advanced skills for a particular situation ... -
Melancholic features and dream masochism in patients with major depression
Ağargün, Mehmet Yücel; Cartwright, Rosalind (Küre İletişim Grubu A.Ş., 2016)To investigate whether untreated depressed subjects with melancholic features have higher dream masochism scores than those without melancholic features, the dreams of a group of community volunteers undergoing divorce ... -
Ongoing or re-emerging subjective insomnia symptoms after full/partial remission or recovery of major depressive disorder mainly with the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and risk of relapse or recurrence: A 52-week follow-up study
Güleç, Mustafa; Selvi, Yavuz; Boysan, Murat; Aydın, Adem; Beşiroğlu, Lütfullah; Ağargün, Mehmet Yücel (Elsevier, 2011)Background: Many patients who remit fully/partially or recover from an episode of major depression continue to suffer from sleep problems, mainly insomnia. Our study assesses the frequency and types of ongoing or re-emerging ... -
Sleep-related violence, self-mutilation, and dissociative experiences
Ağargün, Mehmet Yücel; Beşiroğlu, Lütfullah; Güleç, Mustafa; Aydın, Adem; Selvi, Yavuz (Küre İletişim Grubu A.S., 2016)Twenty-eight subjects with and 46 subjects without sleep-related violence (VBS) were evaluated regarding the presence of self-mutilative behaviors (SMBs). The subjects with and without VBS were compared using dissociative ...