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Research article summary:
Making sense of repetition phenomena by integrating psychotraumatology and psychodynamic psychotherapy.
Abstract Extract: Psychotherapy and psychotraumatology share a preoccupation with repetition phenomena, manifested as transference, compulsions to repeat, or intrusive reexperiencing. Terminological diversity obscures compelling similarities between these repetition ... (Full abstract text below) Published 2002Dec
in Journal: J Trauma Stress
(Language : eng)
Full Pubmed Extract
This information was retrieved, real-time, on your behalf from the public area of the Pubmed website:
1. J Trauma Stress.
2002 Dec;15(6):465-71
Making sense of repetition phenomena by integrating psychotraumatology and psychodynamic psychotherapy.
Orner RJ, Stolz P
Department of Clinical Psychology, Baverstock House, Lincoln, England. rorner@cix.co.uk
Psychotherapy and psychotraumatology share a preoccupation with repetition phenomena, manifested as transference, compulsions to repeat, or intrusive reexperiencing. Terminological diversity obscures compelling similarities between these repetition phenomena and discourages speculation about processes involved in their genesis. This paper remedies these oversights by integrating recent empirical evidence pertaining to memory with European intellectual traditions embraced by its pioneering dynamic psychotherapists. Using dreams as a prototype repetition, the phenomenological diversity of repetition phenomena is shown to be reconcilable with current evidence about memory encoding, storage, and retrieval. Differences in persistence, intensity, pervasiveness, and treatment resilience of repetition phenomena are explained using concepts derived from psychological and biological sciences. Implications for psychotherapeutic theory, practice, and evaluation are considered.
PMID : 12482185 [PubMed - Indexed for MEDLINE]
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Full Author Information
| First Name | LastName | Initials |
| Roderick J | Orner | RJ |
| Peter | Stolz | P |
Affiliation: Department of Clinical Psychology, Baverstock House, Lincoln, England. rorner@cix.co.uk
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MESH categories and related page links
This article was linked to the MESH categories shown on the left below. The links on the right are related Memletics pages.
Category links from this article:- Compulsive Behavior - psychology
- Dreams
- Humans
- Memory
- Psychological Theory
- Psychotherapy
- Stress Disorders, Traumatic - psychology, therapy
- Terminology as Topic
- Transference (Psychology)
| | Related Memletics topics: |
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