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New book offers cutting-edge perspective on causes of schizophrenia; related disorders Charts course for next generation research
BINGHAMTON, NY – About 1 in 10 people have the potential to develop schizophrenia, but only 1 in 100 actually end up with this devastating illness. The challenge is in knowing why some do and some don’t.
“The liability for schizophrenia is relatively prevalent and common in our population,” said Lenzenweger. “Therefore, understanding why someone goes on to develop the illness is a high priority research question. I firmly believe that those who harbor this liability but do not develop the full-blown illness of schizophrenia may hold the key to this puzzle. Since this is an ongoing challenge for our society, training the next generation in how to think about and conduct psychopathology research is just as vital. So what I’ve tried to do is combine both of those elements in a way that I hope will appeal to both the experienced research and those just starting out.”
According to Lenzenweger, the way forward in understanding the causes and development of schizophrenia will be complex and difficult terrain.
“There will be no simple solution or discovery the remedies the entire problem,” said Lenzenweger. “But I hope that my book will chart the course for the field as it stands currently and show the way forward for the generation to come.”
Lenzenweger, who joined Binghamton’s faculty in 2001, is an internationally renowned researcher in the areas of schizophrenia as well as personality disorder.
He concurrently has directed the landmark Longitudinal Study of Personality Disorder, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, that continues to push the frontiers of knowledge in this area, Lenzenweger, a prolific writer, is also an adjunct professor of psychology in psychiatry at the Weill College of Medicine at Cornell University in New York City. He began his academic career at Cornell, where he was a member of the tenured faculty, and he moved on to a professorial post at Harvard. He holds doctoral and master’s degrees in clinical psychology (experimental psychopathology) from Yeshiva University as well as a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Cornell University.