The clinical relevance of interdisciplinary research on affect regulation in the analytic relationship
Author
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Altimir, Carolina
Author
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Jiménez, Juan Pablo
Admission date
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2022-05-24T15:06:30Z
Available date
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2022-05-24T15:06:30Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Frontiers in Psychology October 2021 Volume 12 Article 718490
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Identifier
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10.3389/fpsyg.2021.718490
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/185679
Abstract
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After more than a century of existence, theoretical development, research, and
clinical practice within the psychoanalytic movement have consistently demonstrated
that psychoanalysis is not a unitary and autonomous discipline. This has been
evidenced by the various ways in which psychoanalytic thought and practice have
been informed by and have established a dialogue—more or less fruitful—with
related disciplines (neurosciences, developmental psychology, psychotherapy research,
attachment theory and research, feminism, philosophy). This dialogue has contributed
to a better understanding of the functioning of the human psyche, and therefore
of the analytic process, informing clinical interventions. In turn, it has enriched
research on psychoanalytic practice and process, underlining the fact that research in
psychoanalysis is fundamentally about clinical practice. Since its origins, psychoanalysis
has made explicit the work on the patient-analyst relationship as the terrain in which
the analytic process unfolds. For its part, research in psychotherapy has demonstrated
the relevance of the therapeutic relationship for the good development and outcome
of any psychotherapeutic process. This supports the argument that research in clinical
psychoanalysis should be research on the impact of the analyst interventions on the
analyst-patient relationship. In this context, a central element of what happens in the
analytic relationship refers to affect communication and therefore, affect regulation,
which is manifested in the transferential and counter-transferential processes, as well
as in the therapeutic bond. On the other hand, affective regulation is found at the
crossroads of etiopathogenesis, complex personality models and psychopathology,
allowing the understanding of human functioning and the staging of these configurations
in the patient-analyst relationship. In this way, research on affective regulation in the
analytic process is proposed as a path that exemplifies interdisciplinary research and
scientific pluralism from which psychoanalysis enriches and progresses as a discipline.
The case of a line of research on affective regulation in psychoanalytic psychotherapy
is illustrated. The need to resort to other disciplines, as well as the translational value of
our research and its clinical usefulness, is discussed.
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Lenguage
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en
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Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States