Jules Séglas
Jules Séglas was a French psychiatrist who practiced medicine at the Bicêtre and Salpêtrière Hospitals in Paris.
Early in his career, he was an assistant to famed neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot. Séglas' ideas and theories influenced a number of psychiatrists, including Henri Ey and Jacques Lacan. In 1908 he became president of the Societé Medico-Psychologique.
In the field of psychopathology he conducted studies of delusions, hallucinations and pseudohallucinations, providing a detailed nosology of these phenomena. He did extensive research of language and its relationship to mental illness. Here, he described linguistic traits such as logorrhea, embolalia, near-mutism, automatic speech, alexia, agraphia, et al.; and how these behaviors take shape and interact in various psychiatric disorders.Selected writings
- L’hallucination dans ses rapports avec la fonction du langage, Progrès médical, 1888.
- Des Troubles du langage chez les Aliénés, Rueff Editeurs, Paris, 1892.
- Leçons cliniques sur les maladies mentales et nerveuses , Asselin et Houzeau, Paris, 1895
- Le délire de négations, in Du délire des négations aux idées d'énormité, Jules Cotard & autres, L'Harmattan.
- Sémiologie des affections mentales, Chap. IV, Book I, 74-270, in Gilbert Ballet's Traité de pathologie mentale.