Results 271 to 280 of about 121,443 (313)

Interacting with trauma: Clinicians' responses to treating psychological aftereffects of political repression.

open access: closedAmerican Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1991
Therapists treating individuals who have been traumatized by violent political repression may undergo intense emotional responses, ranging from denial to overidentification. In discussing these reactions, establishment of a therapeutic alliance and awareness of the sociopolitical context of the trauma are highlighted as central elements in the ...
Yael Fischman
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Locus of control, repression-sensitization, and psychological disorder in chronic pain patients

open access: closedJournal of Clinical Psychology, 1984
Examined the relationship between locus of control and psychological disorder in chronic pain patients controlling for the effects of response sets. Fifty-nine patients with chronic low back pain were given Rotter's Internal-External Locus of Control (I-E) scale and the MMPI.
Charles P. McCreary, Judith A. Turner
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Repression-Sensitization and Psychological Defenses

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1968
Byrne's revised repression-sensitization scale (R-S) (1963), a unidimensional categorization of defense mechanisms, is currently enjoying a construct validation vogue. The Problems Situation Test (PST), developed by Dahlke, Dana, and Gross [cf. Dana (1966, p.
C L, Hirsch, R H, Dana
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The Return of Repression? Evidence From Cognitive Psychology

Topics in Cognitive Science, 2023
AbstractThe controversy over alleged repressed and recovered memories of childhood sexual abuse (CSA) was among the most contentious ever to embroil psychology and psychiatry. Adapting paradigms from cognitive psychology, my research group tested hypotheses pertinent to repressed memory and false memory interpretations of recovered memories.
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How Psychology Repressed Its Founding Father Wilhelm Wundt

Human Arenas, 2021
The aim of this paper is to shed light on the misrepresented and repressed agenda of Wundt’s psychology—and to pay an overdue tribute to Wundt. Wundt will be analyzed within the history of psychology, i.e., how his views on psychology are represented in textbooks on the history of psychology (Boring, Fancher, Heidbreder, Woodworth and Sheehan) in ...
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The Psychology of Repression and Polarization

World Politics, 2020
ABSTRACTHow does political polarization occur under repressive conditions? Drawing on psychological theories of social identity, the author posits that the nature of repression drives polarization. Repression alters group identities, changing the perceived distance between groups and ultimately shaping the level of affective and preference polarization
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Political repression and its psychological effects on Honduran children

Social Science & Medicine, 1998
This paper, based on an exploratory study in Honduras, examines the psychological effects of political disappearance and assassination on surviving child family members. There are few, if any, comparative field studies of non-immigrant, non-refugee or non-clinical populations of children with forcibly disappeared and assassinated parents.
D S, Munczek, S, Tuber
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Introduction: The Psychology of Resistance in Violent and Repressive Contexts

Abstract In this chapter, we introduce the reader to the concepts discussed in the volume and provide a summary of the volume’s contributions. First, we offer definitions of resistance, violence, and repression to frame the scope of the volume. We discuss the book’s thematic structure and our rationale for this organization. We highlight
Johanna Ray Vollhardt   +1 more
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