How the Brain Talks to Itself: A Clinical Primer of Psychotherapeutic Neuroscience

Front Cover
Psychology Press, 1998 - Medical - 428 pages
Now you can more fully understand and help your clients with this description of the development of the consciousness of identity as it occurs in well-defined stages. How the Brain Talks to Itself synthesizes recent discoveries in cognitive neuroscience with a psychoanalytic understanding of human dynamics and a working model for clinical diagnosis. In studying how the brain talks to itself to solve survival problems, this text looks at two sets of situations. In the first, neural possibilities mesh adaptively. In the second, dysfunction clouds the picture--something has gone wrong with the brain, in the life, or in a combination that ends in clinical syndromes.

Unlike other books in this area that have narrow focuses, How the Brain Talks to Itself gives you an extensive and thorough exploration of the human condition by examining the effect that impairment of the left hemisphere has on goals and ambitions, problemsolving, the formation of syndromes, the use of transitional object transference in stabilizing patient identity, and how the brain registers, organizes, assesses, reflects, and acts on data. You'll find this information gives you a comprehensive framework for diagnosing and treating your patients. Chapters will further enhance your knowledge and help you improve your skills by:
  • amplifying what we can learn from the conventional mental status exam
  • prioritizing and targeting therapeutic interventions
  • providing a framework for fitting advances in psychopharmacology into psychotherapy
  • reconciling disparate forms of psychotherapy in the context of a neural-systems informed “structural therapy”

    How the Brain Talks to Itself combines vast domains of data so that higher cortical functions consistently relate to their corresponding identity functions. You'll explore the mechanisms that link synaptic potentiation to the emotionally and cognitively organized memories that sustain development. These mechanisms process the cognitive, social, and emotional data that are needed for problemsolving. You'll also see how the ways in which synaptic potentiations are comprised by definable varieties of stress that lead to the spectrum of DSM-IV syndromes.

    Author Jay E. Harris, MD, derives functional and structural principles from all of the disciplines--psychoanalytic psychology, cognitive neuroscience, clinical psychiatry, neurology, and linguistics--relevant to the brain's development, information processing, problemsolving, and syndrome formation. He includes case histories, clinical vignettes, and diagnostic examples of mental status dialogues with patients to help you in your understanding of this complex topic. You'll find that How the Brain Talks to Itself answers many questions you have about the brain's role in identity formation and resultant clinical sydromes.
 

Contents

How Does the Brain Talk to Itself? 258
2
What Is in This Primer?
8
The Functional Anatomy of Consciousness
19
Foundations of Clinical Neuroscience
49
The Anatomy of Our Being
81
Terms for How We Become Who We Are
111
How Neural Systems Conflict
117
How Can Therapy Induce Change?
123
Unifying Hypotheses
245
How the Schizophrenic Brain
271
An Excitotoxic Model for Schizophrenia
278
Types of Schizophrenia
290
Memory and Related
321
Delirium
329
Screen Memories and Trauma
339
A Manual of Structural Therapy
347

The Stages of Life
133
How Adults Solve Problems
161
The Source of Brain Syndromes
193
The Origins of Psychiatric Syndromes
215
Notes
373
Index
407
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