transference

  • 61Трансфер — (Transference). Важный феномен в психоаналитической терапии, заключающийся в том, что пациент переносит чувства, которые он испытывал в прошлом по отношению к значимым другим (обычно один из родителей), на терапевта …

    Теории личности: глоссарий

  • 62data communication — transference of data from one computer to another, transmission of coded information …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 63satellite communication — transference of information via a satellite …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 64telex communication — transference of telegraph messages via a telephone dial …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 65Otto F. Kernberg — Born 1928 Vienna, Austria …

    Wikipedia

  • 66Countertransference — Countertransference[1] is defined as redirection of a psychotherapist s feelings toward a client or, more generally, as a therapist s emotional entanglement with a client. Contents 1 Early formulations 2 The middle years 3 The la …

    Wikipedia

  • 67Psychological resistance — is the phenomenon often encountered in clinical practice in which patients either directly or indirectly oppose changing their behavior or refuse to discuss, remember, or think about presumably clinically relevant experiences.Psychoanalytic… …

    Wikipedia

  • 68Modern psychoanalysis — is the term used by Hyman Spotnitz[1] to describe the techniques he developed for the treatment of narcissistic disorders. Narcissism is understood as a state in which unexpressed aggression and hostility are trapped within the psychic apparatus… …

    Wikipedia

  • 69Self (psychology) — The self is a key construct in several schools of psychology, broadly referring to the cognitive representation of one s identity. The earliest formulation of the self in modern psychology stems from the distinction between the self as I, the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 70mental disorder — Any illness with a psychological origin, manifested either in symptoms of emotional distress or in abnormal behaviour. Most mental disorders can be broadly classified as either psychoses or neuroses (see neurosis; psychosis). Psychoses (e.g.,… …

    Universalium