Psychodynamic Therapy PDF
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Batangas State University
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This document provides a summary of various long quiz coverage points from psychodynamic therapy.
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demands of reality; the part of the mind that generates defense LONG QUIZ COVERAGE mechanisms Psychodynamic Therapy ego psyc...
demands of reality; the part of the mind that generates defense LONG QUIZ COVERAGE mechanisms Psychodynamic Therapy ego psychology – A variation of psychodynamic psychotherapy emphasizing the adaptive tendencies of the ego over the pleasure-based allegiance effects – In psychotherapy outcome research, the influence drive of the id of researchers’ own biases and preferences on the outcome of their empirical studies fixation – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, unsuccessful resolution of the psychological tasks of a particular developmental stage anal stage – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the second of the psychosexual developmental stages, and the stage from which issues of free association – A therapy technique in which psychodynamic control may emerge psychotherapists simply ask clients to say whatever comes to mind without censoring themselves at all “blank screen” role – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the therapist role in which little personal information is revealed to facilitate Sigmund Freud – The pioneer of the psychodynamic approach to transference clinical psychology brief psychodynamic psychotherapy – A more efficient and Freudian slips - Verbal or behavioral mistakes determined, according increasingly common version of psychodynamic psychotherapy, to psychodynamic psychotherapists, by unconscious motivations typically lasting about 6 months or less id – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the part of the mind that countertransference – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, transference generates and seeks immediate satisfaction for all the pleasure-seeking, by the therapist toward the client selfish, indulgent, animalistic impulses defense mechanisms – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, techniques inferential – A characteristic of psychodynamic psychotherapy used by the ego to manage conflict between the id and superego referring to the clinician’s reliance on deduction or conjecture rather than empirical or directly observable information displacement – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, a defense mechanism in which the ego displaces an id impulse toward a safer insight – A primary goal of psychodynamic psychotherapy; making the target unconscious conscious dream work – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the process of interpersonal therapy (IPT) – A specific, manualized, contemporary converting the latent content of a dream to its manifest content form of psychodynamic psychotherapy that emphasizes interpersonal relationships and has received empirical support for the treatment of dreams – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, an important means by depression which the client’s unconscious material is communicated, and a common focus of interpretation interpretation – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the therapist’s attempt to formulate and discuss with the client a hypothesized ego – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the part of the mind that connection between unconscious material and client behavior manages conflict between id and the superego and also meets the latent content – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the raw, resistance – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, client behavior that unconscious thoughts and feelings represented by a dream impedes discussion or conscious awareness of selected topics or emotions manifest content - In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the actual plot of the dream as remembered by the dreamer, which represents the latent self-psychology – A variation of psychodynamic psychotherapy content emphasizing parental roles in the child’s development of self, with special attention paid to the meaning of narcissism at various points, object relations – A variation of psychodynamic psychotherapy including in therapy deemphasizing internal conflict (id vs. superego), and instead emphasizing relationships between internalized “objects” (essentially, sublimation – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, a defense mechanism important people from the client’s life) in which the ego redirects the id impulse in such a way that the resulting behavior actually benefits others oral stage - In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the first of the psychosexual developmental stages, and the stage from which issues of superego – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the part of the mind that dependency may emerge establishes rules, restrictions, and prohibitions phallic stage – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the third of the time-limited dynamic psychotherapy (TLDP) – A specific, psychosexual developmental stages, and the stage from which issues of contemporary form of psychodynamic psychotherapy in which the self-worth may emerge therapist makes efforts to form a “corrective” relationship with the client that does not follow the same unconscious “script” as the client’s projection – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, a defense mechanism in previous problematic relationships which the ego projects an id impulse onto other people transference – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the tendency of psychodynamic – An approach to clinical psychology deriving from clients to form relationships with therapists in which they unconsciously the theories of Sigmund Freud and emphasizing the goal of making the and unrealistically expect the therapist to behave like important people unconscious conscious from the clients’ past psychotherapy – Techniques and approaches used by clinical unconscious – Mental activity occurring outside our awareness; a psychologists and other mental health professionals to alleviate cornerstone of the psychodynamic approach psychological symptoms or improve some aspect of emotional, cognitive, or behavioral functioning working through – An often-lengthy component of psychodynamic therapy in which interpretations are reconsidered and reevaluated again reaction formation – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, a defense and again mechanism in which the ego forms a reaction against the id impulse, resulting in a behavior opposite of the original id impulse repression – In psychodynamic psychotherapy, a defense mechanism in which the ego represses conscious awareness of conflict between id and superego