Call for Abstract

Track 1: Psychology

Psychology is the scientific study of the mind and behavior. Psychology is a multifaceted discipline and includes many sub-fields of study such areas as human development, sports, health, clinical, social behavior and cognitive processes.

  • Clinical Psychology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Personality Psychology
  • Law and Forensic Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Consumer Psychology
  • Sexual Trauma Psychology
  • Evolutionary Psychology
  • Educational and Developmental Psychology
  • Counseling Psychology
  • Experimental Psychology
  • Industrial and Organizational Psychology
  • Sport Psychology
  • Geropsychology

Track 2: Psychiatry

Psychiatry and psychology are overlapping professions. Practitioners in both — psychiatrists and psychologists — are mental health professionals. Their area of expertise is the mind and the way it affects behavior and well-being. They often work together to prevent, diagnose, and treat mental illness. And both are committed to helping people stay mentally well.

  • Clinical Psychiatry
  • Psychiatric Epidemiology
  • Emergency Psychiatry
  • Integrative Psychiatry
  • Pediatric Psychiatry
  • Psychiatry Advancements
  • Forensic Psychiatry
  • Addiction Psychiatry
  • Geriatric Psychiatry

Track 3: Psychology Health

Health psychology is a specialty area that focuses on how biology, psychology, behavior, and social factors influence health and illness. Other terms including medical psychology and behavioral medicine are sometimes used interchangeably with the term health psychology. Health and illness are influenced by a wide variety of factors. While contagious and hereditary illness is common, there are many behavioral and psychological factors that can impact overall physical well-being and various medical conditions.

  • Clinical Psychiatry
  • Psychiatric Epidemiology
  • Emergency Psychiatry
  • Integrative Psychiatry
  • Pediatric Psychiatry
  • Psychiatry Advancements
  • Forensic Psychiatry
  • Addiction Psychiatry
  • Geriatric Psychiatry

Track 4: Behavioral Psychology

Behavioral psychology, also known as behaviorism, studies the link between sensory abilities, thought processes, perceptions, emotions, and behaviors, of course. This type of psychology also examines various behavioral styles, in an effort to develop techniques and methods that change unhealthy, negative and destructive behaviors into more positive, healthier and uplifting ones.

  • Psychology and Human Behavior
  • Applied Behavioural Analysis
  • Phobias
  • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
  • Panic Disorder
  • Bulimia Nervosa
  • Depression Disorder

Track 5: Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy is a way to help people with a broad variety of mental illnesses and emotional difficulties. Psychotherapy can help eliminate and control troubling symptoms so a person can function better and can increase well-being and healing. Problems helped by psychotherapy include difficulties in coping with daily life; the impact of trauma, medical illness or loss, like the death of a loved one; and specific mental disorders, like depression or anxiety. There are several different types of psychotherapy and some types may work better with certain problems or issues. Psychotherapy may be used in combination with medication or other therapies.

  • Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
  • Body-oriented Psycho-Analytical Therapy
  • Psychotherapy Techniques
  • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Theory
  • Functional Analytical Psychotherapy
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Electro-convulsive Psychotherapy
  • Insight-oriented Psychotherapy
  • Gestalt/Concentration Therapy
  • Mental Health Counselling and Rehabilitation

Track 6: Positive Psychology/Science of Happiness

Positive Psychology is the scientific study of the strengths that enable individuals and communities to thrive. The field is founded on the belief that people want to lead meaningful and fulfilling lives, to cultivate what is best within themselves, and to enhance their experiences of love, work, and play.

  • Happiness and Wellbeing
  • Applied Positive Psychology
  • The goal of Positive Psychology
  • Eudaimonia
  • Yoga and Meditation
  • Resilience in Positive Psychology
  • PERMA Theory of Positive Psychology

Track 7: Psychiatric Nursing

As part of the psychiatric treatment team, psychiatric nurses begin by interviewing new patients to learn of their mental health history, symptoms, and living habits. Psychiatric nurses will then help psychiatrists and other physicians to develop a detailed treatment plan for providing the comprehensive mental health care patients require. During treatment, psychiatric nurses may provide supportive counseling, assist with everyday tasks like grooming, deliver medications, and help families better understand the mental illness. At times, psychiatric nurses must also respond to distressed patients in a non-threatening manner and use de-escalation techniques to help patients manage their anger. Some psychiatric nurses may organize social events for patients to connect and develop social skills for faster recovery.

  • Nursing and Mental Health
  • Therapeutic Relationship aspect of nursing
  • Psychiatric Health Nursing Practice
  • Nursing Education in Mental Health

Track 8: Psychological Interventions

Psychosocial interventions for mental health and substance use disorders are interpersonal or informational activities, techniques, or strategies that target biological, behavioral, cognitive, emotional, interpersonal, social, or environmental factors with the aim of improving health functioning and well-being.

  • Gratitude Interventions
  • Creativity Interventions
  • Empathy-related Interventions
  • Meaning Oriented Interventions
  • Crisis interventions

Track 9: Psychological Disorders Diagnosis

The term psychological disorder is sometimes used to refer to what is more frequently known as mental disorders or psychiatric disorders. Mental disorders are patterns of behavioral or psychological symptoms that impact multiple areas of life. These disorders create distress for the person experiencing these symptoms.

Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Intellectual disability, Communication disorders, Autism spectrum disorder, Bipolar and Related Disorders, Anxiety Disorders, Trauma and Stress or-Related Disorders, Dissociation Disorders, Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders.

Track 10: Mental Health

Mental health includes our emotional, psychological, and social well-being. It affects how we think, feel, and act. It also helps determine how we handle stress, relate to others, and make choices. Mental health is important at every stage of life, from childhood and adolescence through adulthood.

Over the course of your life, if you experience mental health problems, your thinking, mood, and behavior could be affected. Many factors contribute to mental health problems, including: Biological factors, such as genes or brain chemistry, Life experiences, such as trauma or abuse, Family history of mental health problems

  • Mood Disorders
  • Bipolar Disorder
  • Women Mental Health in the 21st Century
  • Schizophrenia Disorders
  • Autism
  • Neurodevelopmental Disorder

Track 11: Neuroscience

Neuroscientists study the development and function of the nervous system, which includes the brain, spinal cord, and nerve cells throughout the body. They could specialize in one part of the nervous system, such as neurotransmitters, or focus their research on specific behaviors, such as psychiatric disorders.

  • Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience
  • Neuropsychology
  • Cultural Neuroscience
  • Cognitive and Behavioural Neuroscience
  • Psychology and Neuroscience

Track 12: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a common type of talk therapy (psychotherapy). You work with a mental health counselor (psychotherapist or therapist) in a structured way, attending a limited number of sessions. CBT helps you become aware of inaccurate or negative thinking so you can view challenging situations more clearly and respond to them in a more effective way.

  • Cognitive Science
  • Rational Emotive Behavioural Therapy (REBT)
  • Unified Protocol of CBT
  • Brief Cognitive Behavioural therapy
  • Moral Reconation Therapy
  • ABC model of CBT
  • Cognitive-Emotional Behavioural therapy
  • Stress Inoculation Training
  • CBT for Suicide Prevention

Track 13: Child & Adolescence Behavioral Therapy

Behavioral therapies for children and adolescents vary widely, but they all focus primarily on how some problematic thoughts or negative behaviors may unknowingly or unintentionally get “rewarded” within a young person’s environment. These rewards or reinforcements often contribute to an increase in the frequency of these undesirable thoughts and behaviors. Behavior therapies can be applied to a wide range of psychological symptoms among adolescents and children.

  • Early Adolescence
  • Adolescent Medicine and Care
  • Early Childhood
  • Environmental and social impact in a child
  • Child and Adolescent Counselling
  • Adolescence psychology
  • Child Abuse and Neglect
  • Child Mental Health & Development
  • Child Neuropsychology
  • Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
  • Child Psychology
  • Teenage Depression

Track 14: Couples Therapy for Psychological Disorders

Life is most satisfying when we live in harmonious relationships. Often, when we enter into a committed relationship, we believe we’ve found a near-perfect friend, lover and support.

Life doesn’t always work out as planned, however, and sometimes partners are left wondering what happened. Losing the harmony in a relationship is difficult in itself, but especially so if some of the relationship changes are brought about by one or both of the partners developing mental health

  • Relationship Distress
  • Ego Analytic Couples Therapy
  • Gottman Method
  • Psychoanalytical Couples Therapy
  • Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy
  • Emotionally Focussed Therapy
  • Object Relations Couples Therapy
  • Structural Strategic Marital Therapy

Track 15: Emotion Regulation Therapy

Emotion Regulation Therapy (ERT) is a manualized treatment that integrates components of cognitive-behavioral, acceptance, dialectical, mindfulness-based, and experiential, emotion-focused, treatments using a mechanistic framework drawn from basic and translational findings in affect science.

  • Situation Selection
  • Cognitive Change
  • ABC PLEASE Strategy
  • Situation Modification
  • Response Modulation
  • Dialectic Behaviour Therapy
  • Attention Deployment
  • Borderline Personality Disorder(BPD)

Track 16: Women Mental Health

Promoting mental health in women and increasing access to treatment are possible only through the close collaboration of dedicated health professionals and advocates from multiple disciplines. We invite you explore women’s mental health related clinical, educational and advocacy resources.

  • Mental Illness: Male and Female
  • Causes and Treatment of Women Mental Illness
  • Psychological Distress with Gynaecological disorder
  • Gender Difference in Mental Health
  • Mental and Psychiatric Disorders of women
  • Hormonal Imbalance related psychological distress

Track 17: Computational Approach in Psychology

  • Computational Neuro-psychology and Neuroscience
  • Cognitive Modelling
  • Computational Cognitio
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