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1.
Am J Psychother ; 76(1): 31-38, 2023 Mar 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36695536

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this article was to construct an empirical bridge between object relations theory and attachment theory by investigating how researchers in both traditions have contributed to understanding and assessing identity diffusion (a keystone of personality pathology) and object relations in patients with borderline personality disorder during 1 year of transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP). METHODS: The Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) and the Structured Interview of Personality Organization (STIPO) were administered to patients (N=104, all women) before and after 1 year of treatment. This study was part of a randomized controlled trial in which 104 patients with borderline personality disorder were randomly assigned to receive either TFP (a manualized, structured psychodynamic treatment approach) or treatment by experienced community psychotherapists. Changes on the AAI in attachment representations, narrative coherence, and reflective function were examined for their associations with changes on the STIPO in identity, object relations, and aggression. RESULTS: Patients who shifted from disorganized (unresolved) to organized attachment on the AAI after 1 year of TFP (but not treatment by experienced community psychotherapists) showed hypothesized improvements in domains of personality organization on the STIPO, including identity, object relations, and aggression. Those who did not change from disorganized (unresolved) to organized attachment improved only in the domain of aggression. CONCLUSIONS: These findings highlight the centrality of identity diffusion to borderline personality disorder pathology and the importance of targeting it in treatment. Furthermore, the results suggest that identity may be indexed by measures of attachment security, narrative coherence, and personality organization.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline , Apego ao Objeto , Personalidade , Adolescente , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Adulto Jovem , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Psicoterapia/métodos , Entrevista Psicológica/métodos , Resultado do Tratamento
2.
Am J Psychother ; 76(1): 46-50, 2023 Mar 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36353848

RESUMO

Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) is an empirically based, manualized psychodynamic psychotherapy that emerged as an adaptation of psychoanalytic techniques to meet the needs of patients with personality pathology. As it became more clearly defined through a series of treatment manuals and empirical research, TFP has also come to be considered a conceptual and technical model of therapy that can be used to introduce therapists in training to the principles of psychodynamic psychotherapy in a systematic way. Advanced levels of TFP training and practice involve an emphasis on supervision that is applied in a more structured way than traditional psychodynamic supervision, while respecting the depth and subtlety of psychoanalytic exploration. This article reviews the development of the treatment model and the supervisory process that guides the therapist to carry out TFP in accordance with its proposed mechanism of change.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline , Psicanálise , Psicoterapia Psicodinâmica , Humanos , Psicoterapia Psicodinâmica/métodos , Transferência Psicológica , Psicoterapia/métodos , Transtornos da Personalidade/terapia , Pesquisa Empírica , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia
3.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 91(1): 50-56, 2023 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36174134

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Impaired reflective functioning (RF) is common among patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) has been demonstrated to improve RF compared to other common BPD treatments. If RF reflects a treatment mechanism for TFP, differences in pretreatment RF may also serve as a prescriptive factor for TFP's effects. METHOD: A total of 194 patients with BPD were randomized across two clinical trials to receive TFP (n = 83), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT; n = 31), supportive psychodynamic therapy (SPT; n = 28), or an enhanced treatment as usual (eTAU; n = 52). A mixed-effects model was used to examine whether baseline RF interacted with treatment condition to predict slopes of change in the Brief Symptom Inventory, the shared symptom outcome between trials. Moderation of changes in RF was also examined. RESULTS: Treatment interacted with baseline RF to predict BSI slopes (p = .011). In TFP/SPT, RF did not predict outcomes, ß = -0.00, p = .973, while higher RF was associated with relatively better outcomes in DBT/eTAU, ß = -0.54, p < .001. Patients with poor RF (scores of 0/1) benefitted more from TFP/SPT, while patients with relatively ordinary RF (score of 4) had better outcomes in DBT/eTAU. Treatment effects on RF change were also moderated by baseline RF (p = .014), such that TFP improved RF most strongly among poor RF patients, SPT only among very poor RF patients, and DBT/eTAU not at all. DISCUSSION: Low RF may reflect a deficit that may be targeted by TFP and other manualized psychodynamic treatments for BPD, which may be especially helpful among patients presenting with low RF. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline , Terapia do Comportamento Dialético , Humanos , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Psicoterapia , Bases de Dados Factuais , Resultado do Tratamento
4.
Psychodyn Psychiatry ; 49(2): 244-272, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34061655

RESUMO

In this article, we provide an overview of transference-focused psychotherapy for patients with pathological narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder (TFP-N). In TFP-N we have modified and refined the tactics and techniques of TFP, an evidence-based treatment for borderline personality disorder, to meet the specific challenges of working with patients with narcissistic personality pathology whose retreat from reality into an illusory grandiosity makes them particularly difficult to engage in treatment. We first describe a model of narcissistic pathology based on considerations of psychological structure stemming from object relations theory. This model provides a unifying understanding of the core structure of narcissistic pathology, the pathological grandiose self, that underlies the impairments in self and interpersonal functioning of those with narcissistic pathology across the levels of personality organization (from high functioning to borderline to malignant). We then delineate the clinical process of working with patients with pathological narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder. Starting with the assessment process, using a detailed clinical example, we guide the reader through the progression of TFP-N as it helps the patient move from the distorted, unintegrated sense of self underlying the narcissistic presentation to the more integrated, realistic sense of self that characterizes healthier personality functioning. In TFP-N the focus on the disturbed interpersonal patterns of relating in the here and now of the therapeutic interaction is the vehicle to diminish grandiosity and improve relatedness, thereby effecting enduring changes in mental representation and real-world functioning.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline , Narcisismo , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Humanos , Apego ao Objeto , Transtornos da Personalidade/terapia , Psicoterapia
5.
J Psycholinguist Res ; 50(1): 155-167, 2021 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33566312

RESUMO

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a high risk and prevalent personality disorder that is associated with increased negative emotions, decreased positive emotions, and impairments in symbolization and impaired reflective functioning. These dimensions, while they may impact one another, have not been investigated concurrently from qualitative, linguistic narratives. We hypothesized a BPD group would have lower expression of positive emotions and greater expression of negative emotions and less reflective function than healthy controls. Additionally, we explored the role of referential activity (an index of symbolic capacity) between BPD and healthy controls in the context of valenced emotional expression. An adult, female BPD group (n = 13) and a demographically matched healthy control group (n = 14) were recruited and administered the Adult Attachment Interview and/or the Object Relations Inventory. Computerized text analyses were used to assess positive emotion and negative emotion, the Weighted Referential Activity Dictionaries to assess referential activity, and the Computerized Reflective Function dictionary. On the Object Relations Inventory, the BPD group expressed more frequent negative emotions and less frequent positive emotions; on the Adult Attachment Interview, the BPD group exhibited less expression of positive emotions. There were no differences between BPD and controls on referential activity or reflective functioning on either interview. However, BPD status fully mediated the significant relationship between referential activity and negative emotion expression. The BPD group utilized more referential activity when expressing negative emotions than controls. Conversely, the control group utilized more referential activity when expressing positive emotions than controls. Referential activity seems to play an important role in explaining the BPD versus control difference in valenced linguistic emotional expression. Furthermore, these results suggest the object relations inventory elicits more robust linguistic features relevant to BPD.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline , Emoções , Linguística , Narração , Adulto , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/fisiopatologia , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Feminino , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Adulto Jovem
6.
J Psychiatr Pract ; 26(5): 349-359, 2020 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32936582

RESUMO

The goal of this study was to test in a clinical sample the interrater reliability and convergent validity of the Differentiation-Relatedness Scale (D-RS), a measure that evaluates mental representations based on open-ended descriptions of self and significant others. The study also investigated the ability of the D-RS to predict personality disorders (PDs) from Section II of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), and the dysfunctional trait domains presented in the Alternative DSM-5 Model for Personality Disorders Criterion B in Section III of the DSM-5. We also evaluated if the D-RS predicts observed Section II PDs over and above Criterion B of the Alternative DSM-5 Model for Personality Disorders. We found that the interrater reliability of the D-RS was good on the basis of the mean scores of 6 independent raters and that it showed moderate convergent validity. Results of dominance analyses indicated that the D-RS is a significant predictor of Section II borderline PD and of the overall number of DSM-5 PDs. When we considered the Section III Criterion B for PDs, the D-RS was not able to predict any of the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 domains, suggesting that the D-RS may be more related to personality functioning behind mental representations than to maladaptive personality traits. Finally, results of hierarchical regression analyses suggested that the D-RS produced a significant but modest increase in the prediction of borderline PD traits and the overall number of PDs traits even when the effect of the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 domains were controlled for.


Assuntos
Transtornos da Personalidade/psicologia , Transtornos da Personalidade/terapia , Psicoterapia , Adulto , Manual Diagnóstico e Estatístico de Transtornos Mentais , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Transtornos da Personalidade/diagnóstico , Inventário de Personalidade , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
7.
J Pers Disord ; 34(Suppl): 159-176, 2020 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32186988

RESUMO

Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) is an empirically validated psychodynamic psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder (BPD), based on object relations theory, that has clinical utility for individuals with narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). Given the effectiveness of TFP for patients with BPD, including a number of patients with comorbid NPD, we have adapted the tactics and techniques of TFP with specific modifications for patients with NPD or narcissistic traits. TFP for NPD (TFP-N) retains core elements of the treatment, including a contracting phase and an interpretive process designed to identify and modify maladaptive mental representations of self and others that underlie the affect and behavioral dysregulation in those with personality disorders including NPD. The major goal of TFP-N is the focus on disturbed interpersonal patterns of relating in the here-and-now of the therapeutic interaction as a vehicle to effect enduring changes in personality organization and real-world changes in the areas of love and work.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline , Psicoterapia Psicodinâmica , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Humanos , Apego ao Objeto , Transtornos da Personalidade/terapia , Transferência Psicológica
8.
J Clin Psychol ; 75(5): 824-833, 2019 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30773631

RESUMO

The intensive treatment of a patient presenting with major depression, chronic suicidal ideation, and a borderline personality disorder with narcissistic features is described as it developed over an 18-month treatment. The treatment approach is a transdiagnostic one with an emphasis on change in the patient's representation of self and others, identity and interpersonal functioning. The intended change is not only in the reduction of depression and suicidal ideation but also an improvement in interactions with others at work and intimate relations. The combination of rich clinical information from the therapist and independent research ratings of patient progress provide a complex picture of the treatment.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Transtorno Depressivo Maior/terapia , Narcisismo , Psicoterapia , Ideação Suicida , Adulto , Humanos , Índice de Gravidade de Doença
9.
Psychiatr Clin North Am ; 41(4): 651-668, 2018 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30447730

RESUMO

Borderline personality disorder is associated with predominant insecure and unresolved attachment representations, linked history of trauma, impaired cognitive functioning and oxytocin levels, and higher limbic activations. Two randomized clinical trials on transference-focused psychotherapy assessed change of attachment representation and reflective functioning. The first showed that transference-focused psychotherapy was superior, demonstrating significant improvements toward attachment security and higher reflective functioning. The second randomized clinical trial study on transference-focused psychotherapy compared with therapy as usual replicated these results and additionally showed a significant shift from unresolved to organized attachment in the transference-focused psychotherapy group only, suggesting its effectiveness in traumatized patients.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Apego ao Objeto , Psicoterapia/métodos , Adulto , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Ensaios Clínicos Controlados Aleatórios como Assunto
10.
J Trauma Dissociation ; 19(5): 572-595, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29547072

RESUMO

Forced displacements and their psychosocial consequences in adolescent refugees and their families have received increasing attention in recent years. Although supportive family relations play a key role in buffering the impact of traumatization in adolescents, parental ability to provide such is often subject to extreme pressure. Under conditions of forced dislocation and fear, maladaptive interpersonal strategies in the parent-child relationships may develop, contributing to the onset of psychopathology. We explore new aspects of attachment-related issues for the understanding and treatment of adolescent refugees who have experienced multiple traumas in their childhood. We used a multimethod assessment battery including the Adult Attachment Projective Picture System (AAP), the Structured Clinical Interview, the Youth Self Report and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale in an adolescent boy with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Our subject was an adolescent refugee from the Middle East who demonstrated an unresolved attachment when confronted with loss and fear. His responses on the AAP evoked aspects of insecure-unresolved attachment, including his belief that it is not safe to trust in attachment figures, his limited access to traumatic attachment experiences, his impaired ability to take concrete actions when dealing with threatening attachment situations and the unintentional role-reversal shed new light on our understanding of his traumatic experiences, family functioning and psychopathological symptoms. Our results demonstrate the utility of the AAP in an adolescent refugee with PTSD by expanding our knowledge of a diverse range of experiences across the interpersonal, cognitive, cultural and developmental contexts that formed the basis for an individualized treatment plan.


Assuntos
Apego ao Objeto , Relações Pais-Filho , Refugiados/psicologia , Transtornos de Estresse Pós-Traumáticos/psicologia , Adolescente , Humanos , Acontecimentos que Mudam a Vida , Masculino , Escalas de Graduação Psiquiátrica
11.
J Pers Disord ; 32(4): 562-575, 2018 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28758884

RESUMO

This study examines psychopathology and clinical characteristics of patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD) and comorbid narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) from two international randomized controlled trials. From a combined sample of 188 patients with BPD, 25 also fulfilled criteria for a comorbid diagnosis of NPD according to DSM-IV. The BPD patients with comorbid NPD, compared to the BPD patients without comorbid NPD, showed significantly more BPD criteria (M = 7.44 vs. M = 6.55, p < .001), fulfilled more criteria of comorbid histrionic (M = 3.84 vs. M = 1.98, p < .001), paranoid (M = 3.12 vs. M = 2.27, p = .014), and schizotypal (M = 1.64 vs. M = 1.02, p = .018) personality disorders, and were more likely to meet criteria for full histrionic PD diagnosis (44.0% vs. 14.2%, p < .001). The BPD-NPD group also reported significantly fewer psychiatric hospitalizations in the previous year (M = 0.40 vs. M = 0.82, p = .019) and fewer axis I disorders (M = 2.68 vs. M = 3.75, p = .033). No differences could be found in general functioning, self-harming behavior, and suicide attempts.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/diagnóstico , Transtornos da Personalidade/diagnóstico , Tentativa de Suicídio/psicologia , Adulto , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Comorbidade , Manual Diagnóstico e Estatístico de Transtornos Mentais , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Transtornos da Personalidade/psicologia
12.
J Am Psychoanal Assoc ; 65(3): 509-523, 2017 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28899191

RESUMO

Mental representation was a central construct in Sidney Blatt's contributions to psychology and psychoanalysis. This brief review demonstrates that Blatt's understanding of representation was always informed by basic psychoanalytic concepts like the centrality of early caregiver-infant relationships and of unconscious mental processes. Although Blatt's earlier writings were informed by psychoanalytic ego psychology and Piagetian cognitive developmental psychology, they focused nonetheless on how an individual uses bodily and relational experiences to construct an object world; they also consistently presented object representations as having significant unconscious dimensions. From the mid-1980s onward, Blatt's contributions, in dialogue with his many students, moved in an even more experiential/relational direction and manifested the influence of attachment theory, parent-infant interaction research, and intersubjectivity theory. They also incorporated contemporary cognitive psychology, with its emphasis on implicit or procedural, rather than explicit, dimensions as a means of accounting for aspects of object representations that are not in conscious awareness. Throughout his career, however, Blatt regarded mental representation as the construct that mediates between the child's earliest bodily and relational experiences and the mature adult's symbolic, most emotionally profound capacities.


Assuntos
Relações Mãe-Filho , Apego ao Objeto , Desenvolvimento da Personalidade , Teoria Psicanalítica , Adulto , Desenvolvimento Infantil , Humanos , Lactente
13.
Personal Disord ; 5(4): 428-433, 2014 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25314231

RESUMO

We investigated attachment representations and the capacity for mentalization in a sample of adult female borderline patients with and without comorbid narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). Participants were 22 borderline patients diagnosed with comorbid NPD (NPD/BPD) and 129 BPD patients without NPD (BPD) from 2 randomized clinical trials. Attachment and mentalization were assessed on the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; George, Kaplan, & Main, 1996). Results showed that as expected, compared with the BPD group, the NPD/BPD group was significantly more likely to be categorized as either dismissing or cannot classify on the AAI, whereas the BPD group was more likely to be classified as either preoccupied or unresolved for loss and abuse than was the NPD/BPD group. Both groups of patients scored low on mentalizing, and there were no significant differences between the groups, indicating that both NPD/BPD and BPD individuals showed deficits in this capacity. The clinical implications of the group differences in AAI classification are discussed with a focus on how understanding the attachment representations of NPD/BPD patients helps to illuminate their complex, contradictory mental states.


Assuntos
Apego ao Objeto , Transtornos da Personalidade/psicologia , Teoria da Mente , Adolescente , Adulto , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/epidemiologia , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Comorbidade , Feminino , Humanos , Entrevista Psicológica , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Transtornos da Personalidade/epidemiologia , Adulto Jovem
14.
J Clin Psychol ; 69(11): 1148-59, 2013 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23996275

RESUMO

This article presents a therapeutic approach for patients with severe personality disorders, transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP), a manualized evidence-based treatment, which integrates contemporary object relations theory with attachment theory and research. Case material is presented from a narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) patient in TFP whose primary presenting problems were in the arena of sexuality and love relations, and whose attachment state of mind showed evidence of oscillation between dismissing and preoccupied mechanisms. Clinical process material is presented to illustrate the tactics and techniques of TFP and how they have been refined for treatment of individuals with NPD. The ways in which conflicts around sexuality and love relations were lived out in the transference is delineated with a focus on the interpretation of devalued and idealized representations of self and others, both of which are key components of the compensatory grandiose self that defensively protects the individual from an underlying sense of vulnerability and imperfection.


Assuntos
Apego ao Objeto , Transtornos da Personalidade/terapia , Psicanálise/métodos , Sexualidade/psicologia , Adulto , Medicina Baseada em Evidências/métodos , Humanos , Masculino , Transferência Psicológica , Resultado do Tratamento
15.
J Am Psychoanal Assoc ; 57(2): 271-301, 2009 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19516053

RESUMO

While all patients become more concrete in their psychological functioning in areas of conflict, especially in the setting of transference regression, in the treatment of patients with severe personality pathology this process poses a particular clinical challenge. In the psychoanalytic psychotherapy of patients with severe personality pathology in general, and borderline personality disorder in particular, the interpretive process serves multiple functions. This process comprises a series of steps or phases that can be viewed as moving the patient further away from a single, poorly elaborated, and concrete experience in the transference, which dominates and floods subjectivity, and toward more fully elaborated, complex, stable, and integrated representations of the analyst and of what he or she evokes in the patient's internal world.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Interpretação Psicanalítica , Terapia Psicanalítica/métodos , Adulto , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/diagnóstico , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Mecanismos de Defesa , Transtornos Dissociativos/diagnóstico , Transtornos Dissociativos/psicologia , Transtornos Dissociativos/terapia , Feminino , Humanos , Apego ao Objeto , Relações Médico-Paciente , Teoria Psicanalítica , Transferência Psicológica
16.
Sante Ment Que ; 33(1): 61-87, 2008.
Artigo em Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18795196

RESUMO

This paper illustrates the centrality of attachment issues in a manualized psychodynamic psychotherapy for BPD, Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP). The focus is on how the psychotherapist's awareness of these issues may advance the understanding of psychopathological processes mediated by attachment disorganization, and in particular how the patient-therapist match may foster or impede disorganized attachment.


Assuntos
Apego ao Objeto , Personalidade , Relações Profissional-Paciente , Teoria Psicanalítica , Comportamento Autodestrutivo/terapia , Tentativa de Suicídio/prevenção & controle , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Comportamento Autodestrutivo/psicologia , Tentativa de Suicídio/psicologia
17.
Sante Ment Que ; 33(1): 115-39, 2008.
Artigo em Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18795198

RESUMO

In this paper, the authors present an overview of a range of psychoanalytic understandings of narcissistic pathology with an emphasis on the model and system of classification described by Kernberg. They discuss how the concept of a fundamental split between object relations dyads can contribute to major pathology of superego development and functioning and to the defensive establishment of the false grandiose self that are central to pathological narcissism. The authors also review therapeutic modifications that can help clinicians effectively treat patients with narcissistic pathology and describe distinctions in levels of narcissism that influence both how to approach treatment and prognosis.


Assuntos
Narcisismo , Transtornos da Personalidade/psicologia , Transtornos da Personalidade/terapia , Psicoterapia/métodos , Transferência Psicológica , Humanos , Teoria Psicanalítica
18.
J Am Psychoanal Assoc ; 56(3): 811-32, 2008 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18802131

RESUMO

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck's The Lives of Others, set in the German Democratic Republic in 1984, five years before the fall of the Berlin Wall, has been called the first accurate depiction of the psychological terror wielded by the Stasi, the East German secret police, who safeguarded the dictatorship of the proletariat. The film is about the psychological and political transformation of a Stasi officer, Wiesler, who undertakes the surveillance of a prominent playwright and his actress lover. The mechanisms through which Wiesler comes to empathize and identify with the subjects of his investigation, as he observes and listens in on the rich blend of passion, poetry, and politics that characterizes their lives, are explored in depth. Wiesler's transformation is based in part on the capacity to form implicit models of the behavior and experiences of others, based on the mirror neuron system, that Gallese and his colleagues call "embodied simulation." Underpinning the processes of empathy and identification so central to this film, embodied simulation is an unconscious and prereflexive mechanism through which the actions, emotions, and sensations we observe activate internal representations of the bodily and mental states of the other. Embodied simulation also expands our understanding of the power of the primal scene, which has long been identified as a major organizer of unconscious fantasies and conflicts throughout life, and which forms the central metaphor of the film. Embodied simulation scaffolds our aesthetic response to art, music, and literature, underlies the dynamics of spectatorship, and potentially catalyzes resistance to totalitarian mass movements.


Assuntos
Empatia , Identificação Psicológica , Filmes Cinematográficos , Interpretação Psicanalítica , Terapia Psicanalítica , Conscientização , Conflito Psicológico , Emoções , Humanos , Comportamento Imitativo , Terrorismo/psicologia , Inconsciente Psicológico
19.
J Clin Psychol ; 63(11): 1105-20, 2007 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17932991

RESUMO

The authors address psychodynamic therapies, particularly transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP), in the treatment of patients who present with non-suicidal self-injury. In doing so, they briefly discuss various psychodynamic approaches with empirical evidence for their effectiveness. They describe TFP, including its treatment rationale, putative change mechanisms, and outcome research. They then present a case illustration of a patient with borderline personality disorder who engages in non-suicidal self-injury to demonstrate how TFP can be applied to such cases.


Assuntos
Psicoterapia/métodos , Comportamento Autodestrutivo/terapia , Adulto , Terapia Comportamental/métodos , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/psicologia , Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Ego , Feminino , Humanos , Relações Interpessoais , Modelos Psicológicos , Apego ao Objeto , Prognóstico , Escalas de Graduação Psiquiátrica , Terapia Psicanalítica/métodos , Processos Psicoterapêuticos , Psicologia do Self , Comportamento Autodestrutivo/psicologia , Suicídio/psicologia , Transferência Psicológica , Resultado do Tratamento
20.
Bull Menninger Clin ; 67(3): 227-59, 2003.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14621064

RESUMO

The authors report preliminary findings from a longitudinal study on the impact of attachment state of mind and reflective function on therapeutic process and outcome with borderline patients in Transference-Focused Psychotherapy (TFP). TFP is a manualized, psychoanalytically oriented treatment based on an object relations model of understanding patients with severe personality disorders. The attachment theory constructs of internal working models of attachment and mentalization or reflective function provide an important means of both conceptualizing borderline disorders and assessing therapeutic process and change. In the Personality Disorders Institute at New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Medical College of Cornell University, the authors have been using the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) to assess changes in state of mind with respect to attachment and reflective function over the course of 1 year in borderline patients in TFP treatment. As part of the authors' investigations of the impact of patients' attachment status on the therapeutic process, they have adapted the AAI to evaluate states of mind with respect to attachment within the therapeutic relationship through an interview called the Patient-Therapist Adult Attachment Interview (PT-AAI). The AAI is given at 4 months and 1 year, and the PT-AAI is given to patients after 1 year of TFP, and both interviews are scored for attachment classification and reflective function. The authors present preliminary findings on change in both attachment classification and reflective function ratings at 4 months and 1 year for a subsample of 10 patients and therapists. They also present two cases that illustrate how the quality of mentalization or reflective function in the therapeutic dyad may be seen as a bidirectional process in that therapists' and patients' levels of reflective function are mutually and reciprocally influential. In one case, the patient's and therapist's reflective function mirrored each other directly and remained at a low or rudimentary level for the treatment year. Such a pattern of direct imitation does not necessarily promote intrapsychic change. In the second case, the patient moved from a rejecting or bizarre stance toward mentalization on the AAI to some rudimentary consideration of mental states after 1 year of treatment with a therapist who showed a full and nuanced awareness of mental states, but who adjusted his level of mentalization to that of the patient. These findings suggest that optimally the therapist ought to be one step ahead of the patient in the capacity for mentalization.


Assuntos
Transtorno da Personalidade Borderline/terapia , Apego ao Objeto , Relações Profissional-Paciente , Psicoterapia/métodos , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino
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