User:Jaceknow/sandbox/Colin A. Ross

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Colin A. Ross
Born (1950-07-14) July 14, 1950 (age 73)

ISBN 978-8389574-96-1 OCLC 297537269

VIAF ID: 115437989 (Personal) Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/115437989

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Colin A. Ross (1950-) (1) VIAF ID: 115437989 (Personal) Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/115437989

(2)-powieści VIAF ID: 263773930 (Personal) Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/263773930


The Plural Self isbn=0761960767 isbn=0761960759


one of the world's leading psychiatric autorities on dissociated identity disorder [1]. Past President of the International Society for the Study of Dissociacion. Author of over a hundred peer-reviewed papers and a number of books including The Osiris Complex: Case Studies in Multiple Personality Disorder (1994) and Dissociative Identity Disorder: Diagnosis, Clinical Features, and Treatment of Multiple Personality, Second Edition (1997) [2]


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Colin A. Ross on amazon.com




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Colin A. Ross is a psychiatrist of Canadian origin and professional training. Ross attended medical school at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada and completed his training in psychiatry at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.[4] He moved to Dallas, Texas in the early 1990s where he took a position as Director of Dissociative Disorders at Charter Hospital of Dallas.[5]

Ross specializes in posttraumatic stress and dissociative disorders (e.g., dissociative identity disorder) and has written many books and research papers.

Presently Ross works in the Ross Institute for Psychological Trauma, a hospital in the Dallas, Texas area. He also directs a trauma program at Forest View Psychiatric Hospital in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Most of the people the Ross Institute treats describe very traumatic and abusive childhoods.

Dr. Ross has also produced several documentaries and educational films about dissociative identity disorder. In 1999, he teamed with producer James Myer in the making of Personality: Reality and Illusion. The docu-drama featured Chris Costner-Sizemore, the first woman thought to be diagnosed with MPD. Ms. Sizemore's life was portrayed by Joanne Woodward in the Fox motion picture, The Three Faces of Eve.

In the past Ross was contractor of psycho-pharmaceutical companies; he has been called to participate in neuroleptic trials and continues to publish in the American Journal of Psychiatry.

Claims of paranormal ability[edit]

In 2008, Dr. Ross applied for the James Randi Educational Foundation's One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge with the claim that energy from his eyes could cause a speaker, receiving no other input, to sound a tone.[6] In 2010, Dr. Ross published experimental data that supports his scientific hypothesis that the eyes emit energy that can be captured and measured in the Anthropology of Consciousness, a journal of the American Anthropological Association.[7] During correspondence with Dr. Steven Novella of The Skeptic's Guide to the Universe, he conceded that the equipment he was using was, in fact, a biofeedback machine attached to his laptop, and that the laptop was responding in a well-understood way to an eye blink. However, he claimed that he could still send energy beams out of his eyes, and was working on modifying the software to ignore an eyeblink.[8] His claim has not currently been tested by the JREF. In 2008, he was granted the tongue-in-cheek Pigasus Award.

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Category:Canadian psychiatrists Category:Living people Category:1950 births