Results 41 to 50 of about 2,251 (187)
Cross-Cultural Affective Neuroscience
Panksepp, the father of Affective Neuroscience, dedicated his life to demonstrate that foundations of mental life and consciousness lay in the archaic layers of the brain.
F. Gökçe Özkarar-Gradwohl +1 more
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Both a method of therapy and an exploration of psychic reality, free association is a fundamental element of psychoanalytical practices that refers to the way a patient is asked to describe what comes spontaneously to mind in the therapeutic setting ...
Thomas Rabeyron +2 more
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Lacan's construction and deconstruction of the double mirror device [PDF]
In the 1950s Jacques Lacan developed a set-up with a concave mirror and a plane mirror, based on which he described the nature of human identification. He also formulated ideas on how psychoanalysis, qua clinical practice, responds to identification.
Vanheule, Stijn
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The Contribution of Neuropsychoanalysis to Clinical Practice in Psychiatry. [PDF]
Lee T, Norton-Poulin M, Clarici A.
europepmc +3 more sources
Affective neuroscience, emotional regulation, and international relations [PDF]
International relations (IR) has witnessed an emerging interest in neuroscience, particularly for its relevance to a now widespread scholarship on emotions.
Gammon, Earl
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Theoretical foundations of analytical psychology: recent developments and controversies
Abstract This article gives an introductory overview of the papers in this volume originally given at the Joint Conference of the IAAP and the University of Basel, Basel, October 18‐20, 2018. The aim of the conference was to bring core concepts of analytical psychology together with theorizing and research from academic sciences, at the very place ...
Christian Roesler
wiley +1 more source
Neural and Mental Hierarchies [PDF]
The history of the sciences of the human brain and mind has been characterized from the beginning by two parallel traditions. The prevailing theory that still influences the way current neuroimaging techniques interpret brain function, can be traced back
Gerald Wiest
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Extinction Phenomena: A Biologic Perspective on How and Why Psychoanalysis Works [PDF]
This article presents the view that much of the success of classical psychoanalysis is centrally predicated on its biological potency; focusing not on neuropsychology, but on the biology of conditioning.
Linda A. W. Brakel
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Troubling children's families: who's troubled and why? Approaches to inter-cultural dialogue [PDF]
This article draws on multi-disciplinary perspectives to consider the need and the possibilities for inter-cultural dialogue concerning families that may be seen by some to be ‘troubling’.
Gillies, V. +3 more
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The Experience of Pleasure: A Perspective Between Neuroscience and Psychoanalysis
Pleasure is more than a mere sensory event, but rather it can be conceptualized as a complex, multiform experience involving memory, motivation, homeostasis, and, sometimes, negative affects.
Lorenzo Moccia +5 more
doaj +1 more source

