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Psychoanalysis

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Title: Current Psychotherapies Corsini and Wedding COUN 603 Author: Jeff Garrett Last modified by: crispy Created Date: 8/30/2005 3:18:44 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychoanalysis


1
Psychoanalysis
  • Developed by Freud

2
Basic Concepts
  • Determinism encompasses the idea that
    psychological events are causally related to each
    other and to the individuals past.
  • The elements that occur in consciousness are not
    random and unrelated.

3
Basic Concepts
  • Dynamics
  • There is an interplay of forces in the mind which
    act in unison or opposition.
  • These elements ultimately express themselves
    through compromise.

4
Basic Concepts
  • Topography
  • Individual psychic elements are layered in
    consciousness.
  • A sort of layering of mental contents according
    to the criterion of accessibility to awareness.

5
Basic Concepts
  • Genetics
  • There is an enduring influence of the past on our
    present mental activity.
  • It recognizes the extent to which the past is
    embedded in the present and shapes current
    thoughts, behavior and feelings.
  • In accordance with psychoanalytic theory the
    genetic principle asserts that the past
    influences the present

6
Basic Concepts
  • The pleasure principle
  • The idea that human psychology is governed by a
    tendency to seek pleasure and avoid pain.
  • According to Freud the behavior of a newborn is
    dominantly controlled by the pleasure principle

7
Basic Concepts
  • An instinct is a stereotyped response (e.g.,
    animal instinct) while a drive is a state of
    central excitation in response to a stimuli

8
Other Systems
  • Alfred Adler believed that Freud overemphasized
    sexual drive (the libido) and underestimated the
    role of social and political pressures shaping
    personality.

9
Other Systems
  • As part of the psychoanalytic situation, the
    analyst listens patiently, emphatically,
    uncritically, and receptively. This technique
    forms the core of Carl Rogers Person-Centered
    Therapy.

10
History
  • The Interpretation of Dreams (1900)
  • Freud's view of the individual psychic elements
    of the mind as layered in consciousness is known
    as topography
  • Freud's earliest theory of mental functioning
    described it in layers referred to as conscious,
    preconscious, and unconscious and was called
    topographic theory

11
Topographical Model
  • Freud's topographical model of the mind proposed
    conscious, preconscious, and unconscious.

12
Conscious, Preconscious, and Unconscious
Conscious
Preconscious
Unconscious
13
Topography of the psyche (unconscious,
pre-conscious, conscious)
  • Using an iceberg metaphor,
  • The unconscious is understood to be the large
    part of the mind, which is hidden from view. 
  • The pre-conscious is represented by the waterline
    - but it is the zone in which there are fleeting
    glimpses of the unconscious, "flickering" across
    the screen of consciousness. 
  • Finally, the relatively small part of the iceberg
    which sticks of the water is seen as equivalent
    to the small amount of conscious awareness that
    the human experiences. 

14
  • Freud also believed that if there was information
    that was too painful for the conscious part to
    bear, that defense mechanisms would act to push
    it down it into the unconscious part of the mind.

15
  • The process by which mental elements are barred
    from consciousness is termed repression

16
Freuds Topographical Model
17
Id, Ego, Superego
  • Freud described a structural model of mental
    functioning consisting of the id, ego and
    superego. These structures were repetitive,
    organized mental functions serving separate roles
    in intrapsychic conflict

18
Id, Ego, Superego
  • Id Instinctual Pressures (e.g., aggression and
    sexual)
  • Ego Orients us toward the external world
    (Mediates the internal and external)
  • Superego Individuals moral voice

19
Id, Ego, Superego
  • THE ID The Demanding Child (biological
    component, unconsciousness)
  • Ruled by the pleasure principle
  • THE EGO The Traffic Cop (psychological
    component)
  • Ruled by the reality principle
  • THE SUPEREGO The Judge (social component)
  • Ruled by the moral principle

20
  • The ego is a psychic apparatus which balances
    internal and external realities

21
Personality Development
  • 1. ORAL STAGE Birth 18 months
  • Gratification - Feeding, reduces tension and
    induces sleep
  • 2. ANAL STAGE 18 mths 3 years
  • Gratification - Toilet training, reaction
    formation may lead to compulsive meticulousness
  • 3. PHALLIC STAGE Ages 3-6
  • Gratification Genitals, Males -Oedipus Complex
    and Females - Electra Complex
  • 4. LATENCY STAGE Ages 6-12
  • A time of socialization
  • 5. GENITAL STAGE Ages 12 on
  • Gratification - sex
  • Puberty and continues into adulthood

22
Example
  • Tommy was toilet trained by age 3. During the
    training his parents would often make him feel
    shameful if he accidentally soiled himself.
    Tommy's apartment is now meticulously clean and
    he is quite rigid in his views and a
    perfectionist. This represents reaction formation

23
Example
  • A male child's erotic impulses for his mother and
    feelings of hostility toward his father
    constitute what Freud called the Oedipus complex

24
Onset of Neuroses
  • Unable to cope/develop
  • Disappointment, defeat, loss, physical illness
  • Current reality is misperceived in terms of
    childhood conflict, and the individual responds
    as he or she did in childhood, by forming
    symptoms.
  • Intrapsychic conflicts occur when the mental
    components of the mind are incongruent

25
Onset of Neurosis
  • Psychoanalytic theorists would hypothesize that
    neurosis occurs due to an imbalance between
    drives and defenses

26
Ego-Defense Mechanisms
  • Ego-defense mechanisms
  • Are normal behaviors which operate on an
    unconscious level and tend to deny or distort
    reality
  • Help the individual cope with anxiety and prevent
    the ego from being overwhelmed
  • Have adaptive value if they do not become a style
    of life to avoid facing reality

27
Ego-Defense Mechanisms
  • Repression Regression
  • Denial Introjection
  • Reaction formation Identification
  • Projection Compensation
  • Displacement
  • Rationalization
  • Sublimation

28
PsychotherapyThree Types of Anxiety
  • Reality fear of danger from external world
  • Neurotic fear of instincts overthrowing ego
    (punishment)
  • Moral fear of ones own conscious (guilt)

29
Process of Psychotherapy
  • Transference Patient responds to therapist
    based on past experience
  • Countertransference Therapist responds to
    patient based on past experience

30
Process of Psychotherapy
  • The major portion of the therapeutic work in
    psychoanalysis is thought to occur in a phase
    called development of transference

31
Process of Psychotherapy
  • Goals
  • Tactical goals involve analysis of the immediate
    presenting material in terms of some conflict,
    usually involving the analyst
  • Strategic goal is to explain the unconscious
    fantasy and demonstrate many ways in which it
    affects the patients current life.

32
Example
  • A therapist points out the similarities between
    her female patient's current anger at a female
    boss and the childhood anger she felt towards her
    mother when she was ignored by her father. The
    goal of psychoanalysis this illustrates is
    tactical

33
Process of Psychotherapy
  • Freud viewed the main task of therapy as
    catharsis, which he referred to as a release of
    emotion connected with painful experiences which
    had not been naturally discharged.

34
Process of Psychotherapy
  • The principle goal was to make conscious the
    content of the unconscious
  • The goal of therapy is to make the unconscious
    conscious, for only then can the individual
    exercise choice

35
Process of Psychotherapy
  • The unconscious cannot be studied directly but is
    inferred from behavior

36
Process of Psychotherapy
  • In utilizing hypnosis, free association, and
    other techniques Freud's therapeutic goal
    centered primarily on making unconscious events
    conscious

37
Process of Psychotherapy
  • Clinical evidence for postulating the
    unconscious
  • Dreams
  • Slips of the tongue
  • Posthypnotic suggestions
  • Material derived from free-association
  • Material derived from projective techniques
  • Symbolic content of psychotic symptoms
  • NOTE consciousness is only a thin slice of the
    total mind

38
Process of Psychotherapy
  • The most significant difference between
    traditional psychoanalysis and current
    psychoanalysis is
  • One-person psychology understanding the patient
    exclusively
  • Two-person psychology understanding the
    interaction between the two (patient and analyst)

39
Process of Psychotherapy
  • Distractions by the patient which impede
    psychoanalytic progress are referred to as
    resistance

40
Process of Psychotherapy
  • The Psychoanalytic Situation
  • The patient lies down on a couch, facing away
    from the analyst, and is asked to report, without
    criticism as far as possible, the thoughts that
    come to his or her mind.
  • Basic premise bring the unconscious conflicts
    into awareness

41
Process of Psychotherapy
  • The Psychoanalytic Situation
  • In free association there are various levels of
    relevance of the data obtained within the
    psychoanalytic situation.
  • Observation (the order of material)
  • Interpretation (relationship to behavior)
  • Generalization (accumulated data is generalized)
  • Theory (clinical theory is formulated)

42
References
  • Dr. Jeffrey Arnow, Phd
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