Publications by authors named "Solange Carton"

Inhibition.

Int J Psychoanal

February 2024

This article explores the notion of inhibition at a theoretical and clinical level in psychoanalysis. The first part follows the development of the notion in Freud's work, from the "Project" (1950a [1895]) to (1926d). It identifies the two approaches to inhibition, the first from an energetic point of view, the second from the angle of its relations to anxiety.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how family dynamics, clinical, and psychological factors influence the sharing of genetic cancer risk information among relatives of individuals with BRCA1/2 and MMR syndromes, highlighting that only 30% have undergone genetic testing in the past.* -
  • Results show that disclosure of hereditary cancer risk decreases with closer familial relationships, and increases as time passes since the initial genetic diagnosis and when probands feel a sense of family cohesion.* -
  • Interestingly, while probands' depressive symptoms are linked to higher rates of genetic testing uptake, a heightened perception of cancer risks is associated with lower uptake, suggesting the need for better strategies to facilitate family communication about genetic risks.*
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The Levels of Emotional Awareness Scale (LEAS) developed by Lane et al. (1990) measures the ability of a subject to discriminate his or her own emotional state and that of others. The scale is based on a cognitive-developmental model in which emotional awareness increases in a similar fashion to intellectual functions.

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Objective: Research about the deficit of emotional regulation in Painful Rheumatic Conditions (PRC) indicates that these patients have alexithymic characteristics, as revealed by the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20). However, the use of a unique measure to assess alexithymic trends has been questioned. The aim of the present study is twofold: to compare the levels of alexithymia and emotional awareness in females with and without PRC; and to test the predictive validity of alexithymia measures beyond negative emotions.

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[Emotions and affect in psychoanalysisis].

Geriatr Psychol Neuropsychiatr Vieil

June 2012

The goal of this paper is to give some indications on the concept of affect in psychoanalysis. There is no single theory of affect, and Freud gave successive definitions, which continue to be deepened in contemporary psychoanalysis. We review some steps of Freud works on affect, then we look into some present major questions, such as its relationship to soma, the nature of unconscious affects and the repression of affect, which is particularly developed in the field of psychoanalytic psychosomatic.

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We explored emotional awareness in substance-dependent patients and its relationships to self-reported alexithymia. Sixty-four outpatients with drug dependence or alcohol dependence were evaluated before the beginning of treatment with the Hamilton Depressive Scale and the Covi Anxiety Scale, and they completed the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) and the Levels of Emotional Awareness Scale (LEAS). Subjects exhibited low levels of emotional awareness and TAS-20 scores were high.

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[Consciousness and emotion].

Psychol Neuropsychiatr Vieil

December 2007

This article focuses on the processes that lead to awareness of our own emotions, which deserve particular attention in contemporary models of emotional consciousness. The subjective component of emotion, or emotional experience, was for a long time the most neglected aspect in the study of emotions although it already constituted the initial point of discussion in the famous William James still asked question : What is an emotion? More than a century later, contemporary theories debate about this heritage. We examine the successive historic contributions to the question of the determinants of our own emotional experience: from James-Lange bodily changes to cognitive appraisal theories, also relating the major role that the fundamental emotions theory attributed to facial expressions.

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