Csaba Pleh
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
202 Junipero Serra Blvd Stanford, Ca. 94305
T.: (415)321-2052, Fax: ...1192 Home: (415)323-1998
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 24 Jul 1997 13:57:37 -0400
From: "Christopher D. Green" <christo(a)YORKU.CA>
Reply-To: Society for the History of the Social and Behavioral Sciences
<CHEIRON(a)YORKU.CA>
To: CHEIRON(a)YORKU.CA
Subject: DSM-V Cyber Disorders (fwd)
Resent-Date: Thu, 24 Jul 97 20:02:51 +100
Resent-From: pleh(a)izabell.elte.hu
Resent-To: csaba.pleh(a)casbs.stanford.edu
I thought his might amuse you.
Christopher D. Green office: (416) 736-5121
Department of Psychology FAX: (416) 736-5814
York University
North York, Ontario M3J 1P3 e-mail: christo(a)yorku.ca
CANADA
http://www.yorku.ca/faculty/academic/christo
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 24 Jul 1997 11:31:52 -0400
From: Fredric Weizmann <weizmann(a)YORKU.CA>
To: PSYCHOLOGY(a)YORKU.CA
Subject: DSM-V Cyber Disorders
Those of you familiar with the latest in psychiatric and psychological
disorders as specified in the current Fourth edition of the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) of the American Psychiatric will no
doubt be interested in the preliminary draft of a new DSM-V Committee
set up to report on Cyber Disorders. This report comes to you courtesy of
Bruce Dienes <bdienes(a)S.PSYCH.UIUC.EDU>DU>.
The Cyber Disorders section includes disorders that have a dependency
upon cyberexistance as the predominant feature. The section is divided
into three parts. The first part describes e-mail episodes that serve as
the building blocks for the disorder diagnoses. The criteria sets for
most of the Cyber Disorders require the presence or absence of the e-mail
episodes described in the first part of the section. The third part
includes the specifiers that describe either the most recent e-mail
episode, or the course of recurrent episodes.
The Cyber Disorders are divided into Posting Disorders, Flaming Disorders
and CC Disorders. The Posting Disorders (i.e., Lurking Disorder, Chronic
Posting Disorder and Posting Disorder not otherwise specified) are
distinguished from the Flaming Disorders by the fact that there is no
history of ever having posted a Flame or Flame-With-Apology. CC Disorders
(CC-All Disorder and Spam Disorder) may include episodes of Chronic
Posting, Flamies, and/or Flame-With-Apologies, but can be distinguished by
the number of addresses.
Lurking Disorder is characterized by one or more episodes of lurking
(i.e., at least two weeks of lurking or loss of interest in answering mail
accompanied by at least four additional symptoms of Lurking, including
high on-line time balances, walking away from the computer while logged
on, composing posts and deleting them without sending them, etc.)
Chronic Posting Disorder is characterized by at least 4 weeks of posting
to a newsgroup of listserv more days than not, accompanied by additional
Cyber symptoms such as checking mail several times per day, posts in which
the content is shorter than the message header or sig, and messages of
extreme anxiety when list volume drops.
Posting Disorder Not Otherwise specified is included for coding disorders
with posting features that do not meet the criteria for Lurking Disorder
or Flaming Disorder.
Flaming Disorder is characterized by one or more episodes of hot-tempered
posts, usually posted within seconds of receiving the "trigger" message,
but can be distinguished from the Flame-With-Apology in that the sender
has a sincere belief that he/she is 100% correct and morally entitled to
his/her feelings of outrage. Flaming Disorder is often accompanied by
Chronic Posting Disorder.
Flame-With-Apology Disorder is a milder form of Flaming Disorder, in which
the poster sincerely apologizes for the first portion of the message and
yet sends it anyway. A variation of Flame-With-Apology exists in which
posters staunchly defend their positiong for 3 to 4 days, then abruptly
back down and revert to Chronic Posting or Lurking.
The specifiers described in the third part of the section are provided to
increase diagnostic specificity, create more homogeneous subgroups, assist
in treatment selction, and improve the prediction of prognosis. Some of
the specifiers describe the most recent episode (i.e., Pine Elm,
Anonymous, With Humerous Features, and With Uncomplicated Internet
Access.)
Fred Weziamnn