Fwd: [Adta] brain research & dmt
Moving The Self
MovingTheSelf at verizon.net
Sun Dec 10 16:59:33 EST 2006
> I copied it and pasted it, it seems to work
> http://www.psybc.com/library.php?csect=68
If you still have difficulty, go to
> http://www.psybc.com/
click on the "library" button up high on the menu bar and then click
on the "Allan Schore Group" category on the left side of the page.
Good luck, Patrizia Pallaro, LCMF, ADTR
> Allan Schore and his "Allan Schore group" are promoting clinical
> interventions based on human interactions and developmental
> patterns. Allan Schore cites Irma Dosamantes-Beaudry in his books
> and works with some dance therapists in his seminars. Of course,
> his two-volumes work is a-must-read (Affect Regulation and the
> Repair of the Self & Affect Dysregulation and Disorders of the
> Self) and here, PsyBC http://www.psybc.com/library.php?csect=68
> showcases some of his articles and presentations (and those of his
> colleagues too). Check them out! Patrizia Pallaro, LCMFT, ADTR
>
>
> Paper Title
>
> A Neuropsychoanalytic Viewpoint; Commentary on Paper by Steve
> Knobloch: Body Rhythms and the Unconscious, toward an expanding of
> clinical attention (Schore)
>
> Body Rhythms and the Unconscious: Toward an Expanding of Clinical
> Attention (Knoblauch)
>
> Disregulation of the Right Brain: a Fundamental Mechanism of
> Traumatic Attachment and the Psychopathogenesis of Posttraumatic
> Stress Disorder
>
> Healing Trauma: Attachment, Trauma, the Brain and the Mind (CD
> recording)
>
> How Psychodynamic Psychotherapies Change the Mind and the Brain (CD
> Recording)
>
> On Trauma - Allan Schore Group
>
> Psychoanalytic Research #1: Progress and Process Notes from Allan
> Schore’s Groups in Developmental Affective Neuroscience and
> Clinical Practice 1 (Schore)
>
> Psychoanalytic Research #2: Progress and Process Notes from Allan
> Schore Groups in Developmental Affective Affective Neuroscience and
> Clinical Practice ( Schore)
>
> On Dec 9, 2006, at 9:22 PM, Christine Hopkins wrote:
>
>> Hi Barbara--
>>
>> Thank you for posting the NIH press release about autism research
>> relating to amygdala size, fear of social interaction,
>> particularly of eye contact and impaired nonverbal social behavior
>> in early childhood. It has really got me thinking.
>>
>> (1) Impaired nonverbal social behavior is a symptomatology for
>> which dmt would be perhaps the best modality of treatment.
>> (2) A research protocol similar to Davidson's that included a dmt
>> treatment group and a control group would be a great way to test
>> this hypothesis. It would be important to determine how much and
>> how often dmt treatment would be needed to get results and how
>> long lasting the results are.
>>
>> I have a big frustration with all this wonderful brain research
>> because I don't see researchers, theorists or clinicians
>> publishing about the crucial impact human interactions patterns in
>> early childhood have on permanent physical brain structure, except
>> for Daniel Siegel. Siegel is teaching parenting classes based on
>> attachment and attunement, trying to make a dent in American
>> parenting culture. Do you know of any other published work about
>> this? I guess Bessel van der Kolk's work would be the best
>> example on the clinical side.
>>
>> For example, some, probably milder, forms of autism might be
>> prevented if parenting patterns were more empathic and attuned. I
>> know a psychoanalyst in Seattle who treated an autistic child and
>> the child improved so much that the diagnosis was discarded. This
>> is the piece about repeated patterns of experiences in
>> relationships, including in psychotherapy, affecting brain
>> function and probably physical brain structure.
>>
>> And it was great to meet you at the conference after enjoying and
>> benefiting from your posts so often!
>>
>> Christine Hopkins
>> _______________________________________________
>> Adta mailing list
>> Adta at adta.org
>> http://lists.adta.org/mailman/listinfo/adta
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.adta.org/pipermail/adta/attachments/20061210/3069f3d5/attachment.htm
More information about the Adta
mailing list