Psychoanalysis and Neuroscience
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 recen...
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
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Milano :
Springer Milan,
2006.
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Online Access: | Full Text via HEAL-Link |
Table of 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.