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Activity. --- Control. --- Disorder. --- Man. --- Mao. --- Personality-disorders. --- Personality. --- Psychiatric disorder.
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Veterinary behavioural medicine is marked by inconsistency in the naming and description of animal behavioural disorders, potentially hindering research and reducing the clinical utility of diagnoses. Sources of diagnostic inconsistency are suggested and parallels with human psychiatry are identified. This paper questions the use of categorical models as the basis for classification and reviews criticisms of categorical approaches in psychiatry. Evidence is presented to suggest an inconsistency between discrete categories and the structure of animal behavioural disorders. The potential benefits of exploring alternative models are discussed. It is concluded that it is important to move away from an approach based on advocacy and towards objective assessment of all available data. Existing diagnoses should be viewed as hypothetical constructs, with the underlying hypotheses being identified and subject to investigation. It is emphasized that global communication, empirical investigations and critical review are necessary for the development of a solid scientific basis within veterinary behavioural medicine
Animal. --- Assessment. --- Behaviour,classification,categorical models,diagnosis,dimensional models,spectrum models. --- Behavioural disorder. --- Classification. --- Clomipramine. --- Common mental-disorders. --- Communication. --- Development. --- Diagnosis. --- Dimensional classification. --- Disorder. --- Dogs. --- Dsm-iv. --- Experience. --- Human. --- Investigation. --- Medicine. --- Model. --- Models. --- Paper. --- Personality-disorders. --- Psychiatric classification. --- Psychiatry. --- Psychopathology. --- Research. --- Review. --- Spectrum. --- Veterinary.
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