Improved insight and affect expression have been associated with specific effects of transference work in psychodynamic psychotherapy. However, the micro-associations between these variables as they occur within the sessions have not been studied. The present study investigated whether the analyst's transference interpretations predicted changes in a patient's insight and emotion expression in her language during the course of a long-term psychoanalysis. 449 thematic units from 30 sessions coming from different years of psychoanalysis were coded by outside raters for analyst's use of transference interpretations using Transference Work Scale, and patient's insight, positive emotions, anger and sadness were calculated using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count System. Multilevel modeling analyses indicated that transference interpretations positively predicted patient's insight and positive emotion words and negatively predicted anger and sadness. The qualitative micro-analyses of selected sessions showed that the opportunity to explore negative emotions within the transference relationship reduced the patient's avoidance of such feelings, generated insight into negative relational patterns, and helped form more balanced representations of self and others that allowed for positive feelings. The findings were discussed for clinical implications and future research directions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/ripppo.2019.408 | DOI Listing |
Dual relationships in the training and treatment of group therapists are inherent and endemic to the profession of psychoanalytic group therapy. Independently of theoretical orientation at many training institutes, senior group leaders double as training group analysts, teachers, supervisors, administrators, friends, and sometimes even relatives of group trainees. Further, these trainees are often in the same treatment groups, supervision groups, and classes with each other and may also be friends and relatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychoanal
October 2024
Norwegian Psychoanalytic Society, Oslo, Norway.
According to Freud no light was thrown upon the meaning of his rat deliria until he mentioned that the Rat Wife in Ibsen's play Little Eyolf (1894) had made a strong impression on him. He did not elaborate any further how Ibsen's play became a leading clue to insight into his rat deliria. He supposed that the roots of the Rat Man's great obsessive fear were derived from his unconscious phantasies of introjecting his father's penis per anum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychoanal
October 2024
Madrid Psychoanalytic Association, Madrid, Spain.
The author hypothesizes that Freud had a clinical intuition about a new theory of psychic development, and a new vision of psychoanalytic technique, by introducing his concepts of and compulsion to repeat () in his 1914g paper, "Remembering, Repeating and Working Through". It is postulated that this view remained in the Freudian model as a private, implicit theory, and was not taken up for many decades in the analytic movement. A re-reading of this text suggests Freud conceived of a psyche that contains registers of early experiences, which would never have been conscious to the patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychoanalysis is defined in this paper as a process that initiates in the analyst's mind with the framing of the patient's material in terms of and . Once the analyst is able to do this, a first level of transformation of experience is effectuated that then must be through interpretation to the patient of what is occurring in their mind as it is lived out in the experience with the analyst. For this author, Bion's model of container-contained complements Freud's transference and resistance model; it also offers an example to his thesis that only within a clear model of mind and a corresponding theory of therapeutic action can the psychoanalyst define for themselves and for their patients a way of knowing that they are doing analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Psychiatry Law
December 2024
Dr. Franks is an adult psychiatrist in private practice, Boulder, CO. Dr. Ali is a fellow in child and adolescent psychiatry, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, MA. Dr. Adi is Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO. At the time of writing, Dr. Franks and Dr. Ali were psychiatry residents, Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO.
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