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Gestalt Theory: Implications for Radiology Education
American Journal of Roentgenology, 2008The Gestalt theory of modern psychology is grounded in the ideas that holistic rather than atomistic approaches are necessary to understand the mind, and that the mental whole is greater than the sum of its component parts. Although the Gestalt school fell out of favor due to its descriptive rather than explanatory nature, it permanently changed our ...
Nicholas A, Koontz, Richard B, Gunderman
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Gestalt theory and morbid anatomy
Virchows Archiv A Pathological Anatomy and Histopathology, 1984Contact with medical students as a university teacher has shown that there are different types of aptitude: 5/9 of German medical students possess a visual faculty, 3/9 are kinaesthetic and only about 1/9 have the gift of the auditive faculty. Apart from this, there is a general quality which may be termed gestalt perception or gestalt blindness.
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Autism in Gestalt Theory Towards a Gestalt Theory of Personality
Gestalt Review, 1999Abstract For us, who work with children and adolescents, it is very important to have a developmental Gestalt theory, as well as a Gestalt approach to psychopathology. Based on the theory of contact and the self, I consider autism as a contact and boundary problem in which the child is caught right at the boundary.
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Concerning Rashevsky's theory of the “Gestalt”
The Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics, 1939In experiments of Kluver on monkeys and of Hertz on bees, observed reactions indicate the presence of a neural mechanism which serves to order geometric figures in a linear sequence, so that any given figure occupies a definite place in a one-dimensional array.
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Gestalt Psychology, Gestalt Therapy and the Theory of Autopoiesis
1989First I present what is called the “core” of gestalt psychology: the “law of natural order”. It postulates a principle of self-organization. For Fritz Perls, the founder of gestalt therapy, the principle of “organismic self-regulation” is central to his theory of therapy.
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