CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology
For the past century, suicide has been associated with negative connotations to the liberalistic connotations, however, the fabric of logic and reason behind suicidal ideation continues to exist with countless wrinkles and folds. In my manuscript, a new approach to address the age-old question is pr...
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2020
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oai:doaj.org-article:6cc0ee8910644cdab4080da6f3d6b56f2021-12-01T05:03:36ZCogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology2451-958810.1016/j.chbr.2020.100042https://doaj.org/article/6cc0ee8910644cdab4080da6f3d6b56f2020-08-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958820300427https://doaj.org/toc/2451-9588For the past century, suicide has been associated with negative connotations to the liberalistic connotations, however, the fabric of logic and reason behind suicidal ideation continues to exist with countless wrinkles and folds. In my manuscript, a new approach to address the age-old question is provided – CogEpiCrim, which extends the boundaries of our understanding by using the suicidal ideation, not the action, as an infectious disease that can spread across closed communities. The paper describes how CogEpiCrim is used to classify the “existing wrinkles in our understanding as flaws in our approaches, not the fabric”.Ajay AgarwalElsevierarticleSuicide theoryDiseaseSuicidal ideationCogEpiCrimCognitive scienceEpidemiologyElectronic computers. Computer scienceQA75.5-76.95PsychologyBF1-990ENComputers in Human Behavior Reports, Vol 2, Iss , Pp 100042- (2020) |
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DOAJ |
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EN |
topic |
Suicide theory Disease Suicidal ideation CogEpiCrim Cognitive science Epidemiology Electronic computers. Computer science QA75.5-76.95 Psychology BF1-990 |
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Suicide theory Disease Suicidal ideation CogEpiCrim Cognitive science Epidemiology Electronic computers. Computer science QA75.5-76.95 Psychology BF1-990 Ajay Agarwal CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology |
description |
For the past century, suicide has been associated with negative connotations to the liberalistic connotations, however, the fabric of logic and reason behind suicidal ideation continues to exist with countless wrinkles and folds. In my manuscript, a new approach to address the age-old question is provided – CogEpiCrim, which extends the boundaries of our understanding by using the suicidal ideation, not the action, as an infectious disease that can spread across closed communities. The paper describes how CogEpiCrim is used to classify the “existing wrinkles in our understanding as flaws in our approaches, not the fabric”. |
format |
article |
author |
Ajay Agarwal |
author_facet |
Ajay Agarwal |
author_sort |
Ajay Agarwal |
title |
CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology |
title_short |
CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology |
title_full |
CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology |
title_fullStr |
CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology |
title_full_unstemmed |
CogEpiCrim – The M-Theory of Suicidology |
title_sort |
cogepicrim – the m-theory of suicidology |
publisher |
Elsevier |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/6cc0ee8910644cdab4080da6f3d6b56f |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ajayagarwal cogepicrimthemtheoryofsuicidology |
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1718405546582736896 |