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Wikipedia

Apathy

Apathy is a lack of feeling, emotion, interest, or concern about something. It is a state of indifference, or the suppression of emotions such as concern, excitement, motivation, or passion. An apathetic individual has an absence of interest in or concern about emotional, social, spiritual, philosophical, virtual, or physical life and the world. Apathy can also be defined as a person's lack of goal orientation.[2] Apathy falls in the less extreme spectrum of diminished motivation, with abulia in the middle and akinetic mutism being more extreme than both apathy and abulia.[3]

AnxietyArousalFlow (psychology)WorryControl (psychology)ApathyBoredomRelaxation (psychology)
Mental state in terms of challenge level and skill level, according to Csikszentmihalyi's flow model.[1] (Click on a fragment of the image to go to the appropriate article)

The apathetic may lack a sense of purpose, worth, or meaning in their life. People with severe apathy tend to have a lower quality of life and are at a higher risk for mortality and early institutionalization.[2] They may also exhibit insensibility or sluggishness.[4] In positive psychology, apathy is described as a result of the individuals' feeling they do not possess the level of skill required to confront a challenge (i.e. "flow"). It may also be a result of perceiving no challenge at all (e.g., the challenge is irrelevant to them, or conversely, they have learned helplessness). Apathy is usually felt only in the short term, but sometimes it becomes a long-term or even lifelong state, often leading to deeper social and psychological issues.[5][4]

Apathy should be distinguished from reduced affect display, which refers to reduced emotional expression but not necessarily reduced emotion.

Pathological apathy, characterized by extreme forms of apathy, is now known to occur in many different brain disorders,[6] including neurodegenerative conditions often associated with dementia such as Alzheimer's disease,[7] Parkinson's disease,[8] and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia.[9] Although many patients with pathological apathy also have depression, several studies have shown that the two syndromes are dissociable: apathy can occur independent of depression and vice versa.[6]

Etymology

Although the word apathy was first used in 1594[10] and is derived from the Greek ἀπάθεια (apatheia), from ἀπάθης (apathēs, "without feeling" from a- ("without, not") and pathos ("emotion")),[11] it is important not to confuse the two terms. Also meaning "absence of passion," "apathy" or "insensibility" in Greek, the term apatheia was used by the Stoics to signify a (desirable) state of indifference toward events and things that lie outside one's control (that is, according to their philosophy, all things exterior, one being only responsible for one's own representations and judgments).[12] In contrast to apathy, apatheia is considered a virtue, especially in Orthodox monasticism.[13] In the Philokalia the word dispassion is used for apatheia, so as not to confuse it with apathy.[14]

History and other views

Christians have historically condemned apathy as a deficiency of love and devotion to God and his works.[15] This interpretation of apathy is also referred to as Sloth and is listed among the Seven Deadly Sins. Clemens Alexandrinus used the term to draw to gnostic Christianity philosophers who aspired after virtue.[16]

The modern concept of apathy became more well known after World War I, when it was one of the various forms of "shell shock".[17] Soldiers who lived in the trenches amidst the bombing and machine gun fire, and who saw the battlefields strewn with dead and maimed comrades, developed a sense of disconnected numbness and indifference to normal social interaction when they returned from combat.

In 1950, US novelist John Dos Passos wrote: "Apathy is one of the characteristic responses of any living organism when it is subjected to stimuli too intense or too complicated to cope with. The cure for apathy is comprehension."[18]

Social origin

There may be other factors contributing to a person's apathy.

Apathy has been socially viewed as worse than things such as hate or anger. Not caring whatsoever, in the eyes of some, is even worse than having distaste for something. Author Leo Buscaglia is quoted as saying "I have a very strong feeling that the opposite of love is not hate-it's apathy. It's not giving a damn."[19] Helen Keller stated that apathy is the "worst of them all" when it comes to the various evils in the world.[20] French social commentator and political thinker Charles de Montesquieu stated that "the tyranny of a prince in an oligarchy is not so dangerous to the public welfare as the apathy of a citizen in the democracy."[21] As can be seen by these quotes and various others, the social implications of apathy are great. Many people believe that not caring at all can be worse for society than individuals who are overpowering or hateful.

In the school system

Apathy in students, especially those in high school, is a growing problem. It causes teachers to lower standards in order to try to engage their students.[22] Apathy in schools is most easily recognized by students being unmotivated or, quite commonly, being motivated by outside factors. For example, when asked about their motivation for doing well in school, fifty percent of students cited outside sources such as "college acceptance" or "good grades". On the contrary, only fourteen percent cited "gaining an understanding of content knowledge or learning subject material" as their motivation to do well in school. As a result of these outside sources, and not a genuine desire for knowledge, students often do the minimum amount of work necessary to get by in their classes.[22] This then leads to average grades and test grades but no real grasping of knowledge.[22] Many students cited that "assignments/content was irrelevant or meaningless" and that this was the cause of their apathetic attitudes toward their schooling, leading to teacher and parent frustration.[23] Other causes of apathy in students include situations within their home life, media influences, peer influences, school struggles and failures. Some of the signs of apathetic students include declining grades, skipping classes, routine illness, and behavioral changes both in school and at home. In order to combat this, teachers have to be aware that students have different motivation profiles;[24] i.e. they are motivated by different factors or stimuli.

Bystander

Also known as the bystander effect, bystander apathy occurs when, during an emergency, those standing by do nothing to help but instead stand by and watch. Sometimes this can be caused by one bystander observing other bystanders and imitating their behavior. If other people are not acting in a way that makes the situation seem like an emergency that needs attention, often other bystanders will act in the same way.[25] The diffusion to responsibility can also be to blame for bystander apathy. The more people that are around in emergency situations, the more likely individuals are to think that someone else will help so they do not need to. This theory was popularized by social psychologists in response to the 1964 Kitty Genovese murder. The murder took place in New York and the victim, Genovese, was stabbed to death as bystanders reportedly stood by and did nothing to stop the situation or even call the police.[25] Latane and Darley are the two psychologists who did research on this theory. They performed different experiments that placed people into situations where they had the opportunity to intervene or do nothing. The individuals in the experiment were either by themselves, with a stranger(s), with a friend, or with a confederate. The experiments ultimately led them to the conclusion that there are many social and situational factors that are behind whether a person will react in an emergency situation or simply remain apathetic to what is occurring.

Measurement

Several different questionnaires and clinical interview instruments have been used to measure pathological apathy or, more recently, apathy in healthy people.

Apathy Evaluation Scale

Developed by Robert Marin in 1991, the Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES) was the first method developed to measure apathy in clinical populations. Centered around evaluation, the scale can either be self-informed or other-informed. The three versions of the test include self, informant such as a family member, and clinician. The scale is based around questionnaires that ask about topics including interest, motivation, socialization, and how the individual spends their time. The individual or informant answers on a scale of "not at all", "slightly", "somewhat" or "a lot". Each item on the evaluation is created with positive or negative syntax and deals with cognition, behavior, and emotion. Each item is then scored and, based on the score, the individual's level of apathy can be evaluated.[26]

Apathy Motivation Index

The Apathy Motivation Index (AMI) was developed to measure different dimensions of apathy in healthy people. Factor analysis identified three distinct axes of apathy: behavioural, social and emotional.[27] The AMI has since been used to examine apathy in patients with Parkinson's disease who, overall, showed evidence of behavioural and social apathy, but not emotional apathy.[28] Patients with Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, subjective cognitive impairment and limbic encephalitis have also been assessed using the AMI, and their self-reports of apathy were compared with those of caregivers using the AMI caregiver scale.[29]

Dimensional Apathy Scale

The Dimensional Apathy Scale (DAS) is a multidimensional apathy instrument for measuring subtypes of apathy in different clinical populations and healthy adults. It was developed using factor analysis, quantifying Executive apathy (lack of motivation for planning, organising and attention), Emotional apathy (emotional indifference, neutrality, flatness or blunting) and Initiation apathy (lack of motivation for self-generation of thought/action). There is a self-rated version of the DAS[30] and an informant/carer-rated version of the DAS.[31] Further a clinical brief DAS has also been developed.[32] It has been validated for use in stroke, Huntington's disease, motor neurone disease, Multiple Sclerosis, dementia, Parkinson's disease and schizophrenia, showing to differentiate profiles of apathy subtypes between these conditions.[33][34][35][36][37]

Medical aspects

Depression

Mental health journalist and author John McManamy argues that although psychiatrists do not explicitly deal with the condition of apathy, it is a psychological problem for some depressed people, in which they get a sense that "nothing matters", the "lack of will to go on and the inability to care about the consequences".[38][self-published source?] He describes depressed people who "...cannot seem to make [themselves] do anything", who "can't complete anything", and who do not "feel any excitement about seeing loved ones".[38] He acknowledges that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders does not discuss apathy.

In a Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences article from 1991, Robert Marin, MD, claimed that pathological apathy occurs due to brain damage or neuropsychiatric illnesses such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Huntington's disease, or stroke. Marin argues that apathy is a syndrome associated with many different brain disorders.[38] This has now been shown to be the case across a range of neurological and psychiatric conditions.[6]

A review article by Robert van Reekum, MD, et al. from the University of Toronto in the Journal of Neuropsychiatry (2005) claimed that an obvious relationship between depression and apathy exists in some populations.[39] However, although many patients with depression also have apathy, several studies have shown that apathy can occur independently of depression, and vice versa.[6]

Apathy can be associated with depression, a manifestation of negative disorders in schizophrenia, or a symptom of various somatic and neurological disorders.[40][6] Sometimes apathy and depression are viewed as the same thing, but actually take different forms depending on someone's mental condition.[41]

Alzheimer's disease

Depending upon how it has been measured, apathy affects 19–88% percent of individuals with Alzheimer's disease (mean prevalence of 49% across different studies).[7] It is a neuropsychiatric symptom associated with functional impairment. Brain imaging studies have demonstrated changes in the anterior cingulate cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and ventral striatum in Alzheimer's patients with apathy.[42] Cholinesterase inhibitors, used as the first line of treatment for the cognitive symptoms associated with dementia, have also shown some modest benefit for behavior disturbances such as apathy.[43] The effects of donepezil, galantamine and rivastigmine have all been assessed but, overall, the findings have been inconsistent, and it is estimated that apathy in ~60% of Alzheimer's patients does not respond to treatment with these drugs.[7] Methylphenidate, a dopamine and noradrenaline reuptake blocker, has received increasing interest for the treatment of apathy. Management of apathetic symptoms using methylphenidate has shown promise in randomized placebo controlled trials of Alzheimer's patients.[44][45][46] A phase III multi-centered randomized placebo-controlled trial of methylphenidate for the treatment of apathy has reported positive effects.[47]

Parkinson's disease

Overall, ~40% of Parkinson's disease patients suffer from apathy, with prevalence rates varying from 16 to 62%, depending on the study.[8] Apathy is increasingly recognized to be an important non-motor symptom in Parkinson's disease.[48] It has a significant negative impact on quality of life.[49] In some patients, apathy can be improved by dopaminergic medication.[50] There is also some evidence for a positive effect of cholinesterase inhibitors such as Rivastigmine on apathy.[51] Diminished sensitivity to reward may be a key component of the syndrome in Parkinson's disease.[52][53]

Frontotemporal dementia

Pathological apathy is considered to be one of the diagnostic features of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia,[54] occurring in the majority of people with this condition.[55] Both hypersensitivity to effort as well as blunting of sensitivity to reward may be components of behavioural apathy in frontotemporal dementia.[56]

Anxiety

While apathy and anxiety may appear to be separate, and different, states of being, there are many ways that severe anxiety can cause apathy. First, the emotional fatigue that so often accompanies severe anxiety leads to one's emotions being worn out, thus leading to apathy. Second, the low serotonin levels associated with anxiety often lead to less passion and interest in the activities in one's life, which can be seen as apathy. Third, negative thinking and distractions associated with anxiety can ultimately lead to a decrease in one's overall happiness which can then lead to an apathetic outlook about one's life. Finally, the difficulty enjoying activities that individuals with anxiety often face can lead to them doing these activities much less often and can give them a sense of apathy about their lives. Even behavioral apathy may be found in individuals with anxiety in the form of them not wanting to make efforts to treat their anxiety.[57]

Other

Often, apathy is felt after witnessing horrific acts, such as the killing or maiming of people during a war, e.g. posttraumatic stress disorder. It is also known to be a distinct psychiatric syndrome[58] that is associated with many conditions, more prominently recognized in the elderly, some of which are: CADASIL syndrome, depression, Alzheimer's disease, Chagas disease, Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease, dementia (and dementias such as Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, and frontotemporal dementia), Korsakoff's syndrome, excessive vitamin D, hypothyroidism, hyperthyroidism, general fatigue, Huntington's disease, Pick's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), brain damage, schizophrenia, schizoid personality disorder, bipolar disorder,[59] autism spectrum disorders, ADHD, and others. Some medications and the heavy use of drugs such as opiates may bring apathy as a side effect.[60]

See also

Notes

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References

External links

  • – Essay By David O. Solmitz
  • – McMan's Depression and Bipolar Web, by John McManamy

apathy, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, antipathy, lack, feeling, emotion, interest, concern, about, something, state, indifference, suppression, emotions, such, concern, excitement, motivation, passion, apathetic, individual, absence, interest, c. For other uses see Apathy disambiguation Not to be confused with Antipathy Apathy is a lack of feeling emotion interest or concern about something It is a state of indifference or the suppression of emotions such as concern excitement motivation or passion An apathetic individual has an absence of interest in or concern about emotional social spiritual philosophical virtual or physical life and the world Apathy can also be defined as a person s lack of goal orientation 2 Apathy falls in the less extreme spectrum of diminished motivation with abulia in the middle and akinetic mutism being more extreme than both apathy and abulia 3 Mental state in terms of challenge level and skill level according to Csikszentmihalyi s flow model 1 Click on a fragment of the image to go to the appropriate article The apathetic may lack a sense of purpose worth or meaning in their life People with severe apathy tend to have a lower quality of life and are at a higher risk for mortality and early institutionalization 2 They may also exhibit insensibility or sluggishness 4 In positive psychology apathy is described as a result of the individuals feeling they do not possess the level of skill required to confront a challenge i e flow It may also be a result of perceiving no challenge at all e g the challenge is irrelevant to them or conversely they have learned helplessness Apathy is usually felt only in the short term but sometimes it becomes a long term or even lifelong state often leading to deeper social and psychological issues 5 4 Apathy should be distinguished from reduced affect display which refers to reduced emotional expression but not necessarily reduced emotion Pathological apathy characterized by extreme forms of apathy is now known to occur in many different brain disorders 6 including neurodegenerative conditions often associated with dementia such as Alzheimer s disease 7 Parkinson s disease 8 and psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia 9 Although many patients with pathological apathy also have depression several studies have shown that the two syndromes are dissociable apathy can occur independent of depression and vice versa 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History and other views 2 1 Social origin 2 2 In the school system 2 3 Bystander 3 Measurement 3 1 Apathy Evaluation Scale 3 2 Apathy Motivation Index 3 3 Dimensional Apathy Scale 4 Medical aspects 4 1 Depression 4 2 Alzheimer s disease 4 3 Parkinson s disease 4 4 Frontotemporal dementia 4 5 Anxiety 4 6 Other 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEtymologyAlthough the word apathy was first used in 1594 10 and is derived from the Greek ἀpa8eia apatheia from ἀpa8hs apathes without feeling from a without not and pathos emotion 11 it is important not to confuse the two terms Also meaning absence of passion apathy or insensibility in Greek the term apatheia was used by the Stoics to signify a desirable state of indifference toward events and things that lie outside one s control that is according to their philosophy all things exterior one being only responsible for one s own representations and judgments 12 In contrast to apathy apatheia is considered a virtue especially in Orthodox monasticism 13 In the Philokalia the word dispassion is used for apatheia so as not to confuse it with apathy 14 History and other viewsChristians have historically condemned apathy as a deficiency of love and devotion to God and his works 15 This interpretation of apathy is also referred to as Sloth and is listed among the Seven Deadly Sins Clemens Alexandrinus used the term to draw to gnostic Christianity philosophers who aspired after virtue 16 The modern concept of apathy became more well known after World War I when it was one of the various forms of shell shock 17 Soldiers who lived in the trenches amidst the bombing and machine gun fire and who saw the battlefields strewn with dead and maimed comrades developed a sense of disconnected numbness and indifference to normal social interaction when they returned from combat In 1950 US novelist John Dos Passos wrote Apathy is one of the characteristic responses of any living organism when it is subjected to stimuli too intense or too complicated to cope with The cure for apathy is comprehension 18 Social origin There may be other factors contributing to a person s apathy Apathy has been socially viewed as worse than things such as hate or anger Not caring whatsoever in the eyes of some is even worse than having distaste for something Author Leo Buscaglia is quoted as saying I have a very strong feeling that the opposite of love is not hate it s apathy It s not giving a damn 19 Helen Keller stated that apathy is the worst of them all when it comes to the various evils in the world 20 French social commentator and political thinker Charles de Montesquieu stated that the tyranny of a prince in an oligarchy is not so dangerous to the public welfare as the apathy of a citizen in the democracy 21 As can be seen by these quotes and various others the social implications of apathy are great Many people believe that not caring at all can be worse for society than individuals who are overpowering or hateful In the school system Apathy in students especially those in high school is a growing problem It causes teachers to lower standards in order to try to engage their students 22 Apathy in schools is most easily recognized by students being unmotivated or quite commonly being motivated by outside factors For example when asked about their motivation for doing well in school fifty percent of students cited outside sources such as college acceptance or good grades On the contrary only fourteen percent cited gaining an understanding of content knowledge or learning subject material as their motivation to do well in school As a result of these outside sources and not a genuine desire for knowledge students often do the minimum amount of work necessary to get by in their classes 22 This then leads to average grades and test grades but no real grasping of knowledge 22 Many students cited that assignments content was irrelevant or meaningless and that this was the cause of their apathetic attitudes toward their schooling leading to teacher and parent frustration 23 Other causes of apathy in students include situations within their home life media influences peer influences school struggles and failures Some of the signs of apathetic students include declining grades skipping classes routine illness and behavioral changes both in school and at home In order to combat this teachers have to be aware that students have different motivation profiles 24 i e they are motivated by different factors or stimuli Bystander Also known as the bystander effect bystander apathy occurs when during an emergency those standing by do nothing to help but instead stand by and watch Sometimes this can be caused by one bystander observing other bystanders and imitating their behavior If other people are not acting in a way that makes the situation seem like an emergency that needs attention often other bystanders will act in the same way 25 The diffusion to responsibility can also be to blame for bystander apathy The more people that are around in emergency situations the more likely individuals are to think that someone else will help so they do not need to This theory was popularized by social psychologists in response to the 1964 Kitty Genovese murder The murder took place in New York and the victim Genovese was stabbed to death as bystanders reportedly stood by and did nothing to stop the situation or even call the police 25 Latane and Darley are the two psychologists who did research on this theory They performed different experiments that placed people into situations where they had the opportunity to intervene or do nothing The individuals in the experiment were either by themselves with a stranger s with a friend or with a confederate The experiments ultimately led them to the conclusion that there are many social and situational factors that are behind whether a person will react in an emergency situation or simply remain apathetic to what is occurring MeasurementSeveral different questionnaires and clinical interview instruments have been used to measure pathological apathy or more recently apathy in healthy people Apathy Evaluation Scale Developed by Robert Marin in 1991 the Apathy Evaluation Scale AES was the first method developed to measure apathy in clinical populations Centered around evaluation the scale can either be self informed or other informed The three versions of the test include self informant such as a family member and clinician The scale is based around questionnaires that ask about topics including interest motivation socialization and how the individual spends their time The individual or informant answers on a scale of not at all slightly somewhat or a lot Each item on the evaluation is created with positive or negative syntax and deals with cognition behavior and emotion Each item is then scored and based on the score the individual s level of apathy can be evaluated 26 Apathy Motivation Index The Apathy Motivation Index AMI was developed to measure different dimensions of apathy in healthy people Factor analysis identified three distinct axes of apathy behavioural social and emotional 27 The AMI has since been used to examine apathy in patients with Parkinson s disease who overall showed evidence of behavioural and social apathy but not emotional apathy 28 Patients with Alzheimer s disease Parkinson s disease subjective cognitive impairment and limbic encephalitis have also been assessed using the AMI and their self reports of apathy were compared with those of caregivers using the AMI caregiver scale 29 Dimensional Apathy Scale The Dimensional Apathy Scale DAS is a multidimensional apathy instrument for measuring subtypes of apathy in different clinical populations and healthy adults It was developed using factor analysis quantifying Executive apathy lack of motivation for planning organising and attention Emotional apathy emotional indifference neutrality flatness or blunting and Initiation apathy lack of motivation for self generation of thought action There is a self rated version of the DAS 30 and an informant carer rated version of the DAS 31 Further a clinical brief DAS has also been developed 32 It has been validated for use in stroke Huntington s disease motor neurone disease Multiple Sclerosis dementia Parkinson s disease and schizophrenia showing to differentiate profiles of apathy subtypes between these conditions 33 34 35 36 37 Medical aspectsDepression Main article Major depressive disorder Mental health journalist and author John McManamy argues that although psychiatrists do not explicitly deal with the condition of apathy it is a psychological problem for some depressed people in which they get a sense that nothing matters the lack of will to go on and the inability to care about the consequences 38 self published source He describes depressed people who cannot seem to make themselves do anything who can t complete anything and who do not feel any excitement about seeing loved ones 38 He acknowledges that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders does not discuss apathy In a Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences article from 1991 Robert Marin MD claimed that pathological apathy occurs due to brain damage or neuropsychiatric illnesses such as Alzheimer s Parkinson s Huntington s disease or stroke Marin argues that apathy is a syndrome associated with many different brain disorders 38 This has now been shown to be the case across a range of neurological and psychiatric conditions 6 A review article by Robert van Reekum MD et al from the University of Toronto in the Journal of Neuropsychiatry 2005 claimed that an obvious relationship between depression and apathy exists in some populations 39 However although many patients with depression also have apathy several studies have shown that apathy can occur independently of depression and vice versa 6 Apathy can be associated with depression a manifestation of negative disorders in schizophrenia or a symptom of various somatic and neurological disorders 40 6 Sometimes apathy and depression are viewed as the same thing but actually take different forms depending on someone s mental condition 41 Alzheimer s disease Depending upon how it has been measured apathy affects 19 88 percent of individuals with Alzheimer s disease mean prevalence of 49 across different studies 7 It is a neuropsychiatric symptom associated with functional impairment Brain imaging studies have demonstrated changes in the anterior cingulate cortex orbitofrontal cortex dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and ventral striatum in Alzheimer s patients with apathy 42 Cholinesterase inhibitors used as the first line of treatment for the cognitive symptoms associated with dementia have also shown some modest benefit for behavior disturbances such as apathy 43 The effects of donepezil galantamine and rivastigmine have all been assessed but overall the findings have been inconsistent and it is estimated that apathy in 60 of Alzheimer s patients does not respond to treatment with these drugs 7 Methylphenidate a dopamine and noradrenaline reuptake blocker has received increasing interest for the treatment of apathy Management of apathetic symptoms using methylphenidate has shown promise in randomized placebo controlled trials of Alzheimer s patients 44 45 46 A phase III multi centered randomized placebo controlled trial of methylphenidate for the treatment of apathy has reported positive effects 47 Parkinson s disease Overall 40 of Parkinson s disease patients suffer from apathy with prevalence rates varying from 16 to 62 depending on the study 8 Apathy is increasingly recognized to be an important non motor symptom in Parkinson s disease 48 It has a significant negative impact on quality of life 49 In some patients apathy can be improved by dopaminergic medication 50 There is also some evidence for a positive effect of cholinesterase inhibitors such as Rivastigmine on apathy 51 Diminished sensitivity to reward may be a key component of the syndrome in Parkinson s disease 52 53 Frontotemporal dementia Pathological apathy is considered to be one of the diagnostic features of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia 54 occurring in the majority of people with this condition 55 Both hypersensitivity to effort as well as blunting of sensitivity to reward may be components of behavioural apathy in frontotemporal dementia 56 Anxiety While apathy and anxiety may appear to be separate and different states of being there are many ways that severe anxiety can cause apathy First the emotional fatigue that so often accompanies severe anxiety leads to one s emotions being worn out thus leading to apathy Second the low serotonin levels associated with anxiety often lead to less passion and interest in the activities in one s life which can be seen as apathy Third negative thinking and distractions associated with anxiety can ultimately lead to a decrease in one s overall happiness which can then lead to an apathetic outlook about one s life Finally the difficulty enjoying activities that individuals with anxiety often face can lead to them doing these activities much less often and can give them a sense of apathy about their lives Even behavioral apathy may be found in individuals with anxiety in the form of them not wanting to make efforts to treat their anxiety 57 Other Often apathy is felt after witnessing horrific acts such as the killing or maiming of people during a war e g posttraumatic stress disorder It is also known to be a distinct psychiatric syndrome 58 that is associated with many conditions more prominently recognized in the elderly some of which are CADASIL syndrome depression Alzheimer s disease Chagas disease Creutzfeldt Jakob disease dementia and dementias such as Alzheimer s disease vascular dementia and frontotemporal dementia Korsakoff s syndrome excessive vitamin D hypothyroidism hyperthyroidism general fatigue Huntington s disease Pick s disease progressive supranuclear palsy PSP brain damage schizophrenia schizoid personality disorder bipolar disorder 59 autism spectrum disorders ADHD and others Some medications and the heavy use of drugs such as opiates may bring apathy as a side effect 60 See alsoAcedia Callous and unemotional traits Compassion fatigue Detachment philosophy Kuudere Political apathy Reduced affect displayNotes Csikszentmihalyi M 1997 Finding Flow The Psychology of Engagement with Everyday Life 1st ed New York Basic Books p 31 ISBN 978 0 465 02411 7 a b Fahed M Steffens DC May 2021 Apathy Neurobiology Assessment and Treatment Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience 19 2 181 189 doi 10 9758 cpn 2021 19 2 181 PMC 8077060 PMID 33888648 Marin R S amp Wilkosz P A 2005 Disorders of diminished motivation Archived 2012 11 22 at the Wayback Machine Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation 20 4 377 388 a b Apathy Cleveland Clinic Retrieved 30 December 2023 Pishghadam Reza Faribi Maryam Kolahi Ahari Mahtab Shadloo Farzaneh Gholami Mohammad Javad Shayesteh Shaghayegh 29 August 2022 Intelligence emotional intelligence and emo sensory intelligence Which one is a better predictor of university students academic success Frontiers in Psychology 13 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2022 995988 ISSN 1664 1078 PMC 9465416 a b c d e Husain M Roiser JP August 2018 Neuroscience of apathy and anhedonia a transdiagnostic approach PDF Nature Reviews Neuroscience 19 8 470 484 doi 10 1038 s41583 018 0029 9 PMID 29946157 S2CID 49428707 a b c Nobis L Husain M August 2018 Apathy in Alzheimer s disease Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 22 7 13 doi 10 1016 j cobeha 2017 12 007 PMC 6095925 PMID 30123816 a b den Brok Melina G H E van Dalen Jan Willem van Gool Willem A Moll van Charante Eric P de Bie Rob M A Richard Edo May 2015 Apathy in Parkinson s disease A systematic review and meta analysis Movement Disorders 30 6 759 769 doi 10 1002 mds 26208 ISSN 1531 8257 PMID 25787145 S2CID 35664376 Bortolon C Macgregor A Capdevielle D Raffard S September 2018 Apathy in schizophrenia A review of neuropsychological and neuroanatomical studies Neuropsychologia 118 Pt B 22 33 doi 10 1016 j neuropsychologia 2017 09 033 PMID 28966139 S2CID 13411386 Apathy Definition and More from the Free Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam webster com Retrieved 25 February 2014 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon ἀpa8 eia Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 25 February 2014 Fleming W 2006 1857 The vocabulary of philosophy mental moral and metaphysical Kessinger Publishing p 34 ISBN 978 1 4286 3324 7 and in hardcover 2007 ISBN 978 0 548 12371 3 Linjamaa P 2019 Emotions Demons and Moral Ability The Ethics of The Tripartite Tractate NHC I 5 A Study of Determinism and Early Christian Philosophy of Ethics Brill pp 71 111 ISBN 978 90 04 40775 6 JSTOR 10 1163 j ctv1sr6hq6 7 Carey J 2018 Dispassion as an Ethical Ideal Ergo an Open Access Journal of Philosophy 5 20201214 doi 10 3998 ergo 12405314 0005 024 hdl 2027 spo 12405314 0005 024 ISSN 2330 4014 S2CID 59323805 Greek Lexicon G543 KJV V3 blueletterbible org Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 25 February 2014 Maier H O 1994 Clement of Alexandria and the Care of the Self Journal of the American Academy of Religion 62 3 720 721 Webb TE July 2006 Dottyville Craiglockhart War Hospital and shell shock treatment in the First World War Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 99 7 342 346 doi 10 1177 014107680609900716 PMC 1484566 PMID 16816263 Passos John 1950 The Prospect Before Us Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 1199716941 Buscaglia Leo 1972 Love A Warm and Wonderful Book About the Largest Experience in Life Fawcett Books ISBN 9780449234525 Keller H 1994 1927 Chapter 6 Light in My Darkness West Chester Pa Chrysalis Books ISBN 978 0 87785 146 2 But if we listen to the best men and women everywhere they will say that science may have found a cure for most evils but it has found no remedy for the worst of them all the apathy of human beings The tyranny of a prince in an oligarchy is not so dangerous to the public welfare as the apathy of a citizen in a democracy Montesquieu Spirit of the laws 1748 From the series Great Ideas Smithsonian American Art Museum americanart si edu Retrieved 15 March 2024 a b c Bishop JH January 1989 Perspective Why the Apathy in American High Schools Educational Researcher 18 1 6 42 doi 10 3102 0013189X018001006 ISSN 0013 189X S2CID 145803015 Sanders J Ticktin R Finding the Root Cause of Student Apathy Pan intrasun tcnj edu Archived from the original on 24 March 2013 Retrieved 25 February 2014 Apathy in High School Students An Examination Into Causes and A Suggested Plan for Change Korpershoek H Kuyper H van der Werf G 1 March 2015 Differences in students school motivation A 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Daniel Kienast Annika Maio Maria R Plant Olivia Slavkova Elitsa Toniolo Sofia Zambellas Rhea Irani Sarosh R Husain Masud March 2022 Assessment of apathy in neurological patients using the Apathy Motivation Index caregiver version Journal of Neuropsychology 16 1 236 258 doi 10 1111 jnp 12262 ISSN 1748 6653 PMC 9290131 PMID 34532963 Radakovic R Abrahams S November 2014 Developing a new apathy measurement scale Dimensional Apathy Scale PDF Psychiatry Research 219 3 658 63 doi 10 1016 j psychres 2014 06 010 PMID 24972546 S2CID 16313833 Radakovic R Stephenson L Colville S Swingler R Chandran S Abrahams S June 2016 Multidimensional apathy in ALS validation of the Dimensional Apathy Scale PDF Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 87 6 663 9 doi 10 1136 jnnp 2015 310772 PMID 26203157 S2CID 15540782 Radakovic R Stephenson L Colville S Swingler R Chandran S Abrahams S June 2016 Multidimensional apathy in ALS validation of the Dimensional Apathy Scale PDF Journal of Neurology 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Disorders 14 3 doi 10 4088 PCC 11m01326 PMC 3466038 PMID 23106029 References nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chambers Ephraim ed 1728 Apathy Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences 1st ed James and John Knapton et al External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Apathy The Roots of Apathy Essay By David O Solmitz Apathy McMan s Depression and Bipolar Web by John McManamy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apathy amp oldid 1214312607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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