In the letter by Scorza and Cavalheiro1, the authors posit that the use of psychoanalysis for neuropsychiatric syndromes “has a direct positive influence” on neurogenesis. Yet, the authors acknowledge that the putative mechanisms to explain the alleged role of psychoanalysis on neuroplasticity remain “still poorly explored”
Objective: There is increasing concern that the course of psychiatric disorders may be affected by p...
Psychoanalysis has its place in modern medicine, and neuropsychoanalysis is here to support i
Abstract: Neuroplasticity is a relatively new concept about the brain’s ability to rewire itself in ...
The psychoanalytic method requires, on the analyst\u2019s part, a core psychoanalytic stance, where ...
“Psychoanalysis versus psychiatry” and “unconscious versus brain” are classic oppositions between di...
In their paper “The case for neuropsychoanalysis” Yovell, Solms, and Fotopoulou (2015) respond to ou...
Otto Kernberg provides us with a detailed and sophisticated account of how contemporary evidence fro...
The clinical work of psychoanalysts can be thought of in both a narrow and a broad sense. In the nar...
For number of years there existed two groups amongst those involved in treating mental disorders, th...
<div class="page" title="Page 72"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>The natural a...
This article analyses how and with what consequences body–mind relations (the sphere of the psychoso...
Sigmund Freud was a trained neuroanatomist and wrote his first psychoanalytical theory in neuroscien...
Is intensive psychotherapy needed to harness the brain’s natural plasticity? In order to throw light...
The main aim of the paper is to show that many previously forgotten discoveries within the field of ...
Neural plasticity—the ability to change and adapt in response to stimuli—is an essential aspect of h...
Objective: There is increasing concern that the course of psychiatric disorders may be affected by p...
Psychoanalysis has its place in modern medicine, and neuropsychoanalysis is here to support i
Abstract: Neuroplasticity is a relatively new concept about the brain’s ability to rewire itself in ...
The psychoanalytic method requires, on the analyst\u2019s part, a core psychoanalytic stance, where ...
“Psychoanalysis versus psychiatry” and “unconscious versus brain” are classic oppositions between di...
In their paper “The case for neuropsychoanalysis” Yovell, Solms, and Fotopoulou (2015) respond to ou...
Otto Kernberg provides us with a detailed and sophisticated account of how contemporary evidence fro...
The clinical work of psychoanalysts can be thought of in both a narrow and a broad sense. In the nar...
For number of years there existed two groups amongst those involved in treating mental disorders, th...
<div class="page" title="Page 72"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>The natural a...
This article analyses how and with what consequences body–mind relations (the sphere of the psychoso...
Sigmund Freud was a trained neuroanatomist and wrote his first psychoanalytical theory in neuroscien...
Is intensive psychotherapy needed to harness the brain’s natural plasticity? In order to throw light...
The main aim of the paper is to show that many previously forgotten discoveries within the field of ...
Neural plasticity—the ability to change and adapt in response to stimuli—is an essential aspect of h...
Objective: There is increasing concern that the course of psychiatric disorders may be affected by p...
Psychoanalysis has its place in modern medicine, and neuropsychoanalysis is here to support i
Abstract: Neuroplasticity is a relatively new concept about the brain’s ability to rewire itself in ...