Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience
Title:
Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience
ISBN:
9788847005501
Edition:
1st ed. 2006.
Publication Information New:
Milano : Springer Milan : Imprint: Springer, 2006.
Physical Description:
XI, 436 p. online resource.
Contents:
Introduction: How the Neurosciences Can Contribute to Psychoanalysis -- Introduction: How the Neurosciences Can Contribute to Psychoanalysis -- Memories and Emotions -- Cooperation not Incorporation: Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience -- Recollecting the Past in the Present: Memory in the Dialogue Between Psychoanalysis and Cognitive Science -- Implicit Memory and Unrepressed Unconscious: How They Surface in the Transference and in the Dream -- Interactions Between Emotion and Cognition: A Neurobiological Perspective -- Unconscious Emotional Memories and the Right Hemisphere -- Psychoanalysis and Neurosciences: Anxiety in Perspective -- The Predicting Brain: Psychoanalysis and Repeating the Past in the Present -- The Brain's Experience-Dependent Plasticity, State-Dependent Recall, and Creation of Subjectivity of Mental Functions -- The Shared Emotions -- The Sensorimotor Side of Empathy for Pain -- Human Anterior Cingulate Cortex and Affective Pain Induced by Mimic Words: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study -- Intentional Attunement: Embodied Simulation and Its Role in Social Cognition -- The Dream -- The Dream in the Dialogue Between Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience -- Repression: A Cognitive Neuroscience Approach -- Dreaming: A Neurological View -- The Fetus and the Newborn -- On the Onset of Human Fetal Behavior -- In Search of the Early Mental Organization of the Infant: Contributions from the Neurophysiology of Nursing.
Abstract:
The most recent scientific studies have brought a significant contribution to the understanding of basic mental functions such as memory, dreams, identification, repression, which constitute the basis of the psychoanalytical theory. As a matter of fact, numerous neuroscientific observations in recent years have laid the ground for hypotheses on the neurological organization of mental functions that are fundamental to psychoanalytical theory; the discovery of the implicit memory has extended Freud's concept of the unconscious (1915) and highlighted the unrepressed unconscious connected particularly to experiences of the primary relation, stored in the implicit memory. The book focuses on the possibility of interactions between psychoanalysis and neuroscience - i.e., emotions and the right hemisphere, serotonin and depression - and will be a unique tool not only for for professionals and students working in these fields, but also for operators of allied disciplines, such as psychology and psychotherapy.
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Electronic Access:
Full Text Available From Springer Nature Medicine 2006 Packages
Language:
English