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"Ticic, Robin"
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Minding the findings: Let's not miss the message of memory reconsolidation research for psychotherapy
2015
That memory reconsolidation is the process underlying decisive, lasting therapeutic change has long been our proposal, and the recognition of its critical role by Lane et al. is a welcome development. However, in our view their account has significant errors due to neglect of research findings and neglect of previous work on the clinical application of those findings.
Journal Article
Stressorbasierte Psychotherapie
2020
Social awareness of the consequences of interpersonal violence, particularly against children and young people, has grown enormously in recent years.Psychotraumatological research has made a significant contribution to this by clearly showing that unprocessed stressful life experiences in the form of chronic stress and affect dysregulation can.
Unlocking the Emotional Brain
While most neuroscientists once believed that implicit memories, avoidance reactions, and rigid schemas were locked permanently in the brain's synaptic pathways, recent brain research shows that, under certain conditions and within a brief timeframe, we can not only unlock these neural pathways, but actually erase them and substitute new learning. Since before our oldest hominid ancestors walked the earth, our nervous systems were biologically wired to keep fully alive the memory circuits of learned threat and danger for the duration of our lives, guaranteeing that we won't ignore cues to potentially perilous situations that could threaten our survival.
Magazine Article