
@article{ref1,
title="Bus hijacking by a pre-schizophrenic: from a viewpoint of criminal romance",
journal="Psychiatry and the Clinical Neurosciences",
year="1997",
author="Satoh, S. and Obata, S. and Tanaka, H. and Ito, S. and Ishizuka, C. and Minoshita, S. and Morita, N.",
volume="51",
number="4",
pages="223-225",
abstract="There are cases in which no clear symptoms of schizophrenia are observed in a person at the time of a crime but are diagnosed to have schizophrenia after the crime due to the appearance of typical symptoms. We present psychiatric evidence of a patient who saw a bus hijacking incident on TV during several years of isolation at home after graduation from junior high school, and was then determined to hijack a bus, and carried out the crime 6 months later. The patient exhibited clear symptoms of schizophrenia 3 days after the crime. This case of a crime committed before the appearance of clear symptoms of schizophrenia was evaluated from the viewpoint of verbrecherromantik or 'criminal romance'.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1323-1316",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}