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Change Through Time in Psychoanalysis: Transformations and Interventions, The Three Level Model
I Clinical thinking in psychoanalysis
A common ground in clinical discussion groups Intersubjective resonance and implicit operational theories
Pluralism: Theoretical integration or incommensurability?
The clinical common ground
The Three-Level Model for Observing Patient Transformations as a tool to explore the common ground
Level I: Shared resonance
Level 2: From empathetic resonance to the conceptualization of diagnostic dimensions
The common ground at the level of theoretical explanations
Conclusions
Note
References
Underlying clinical thinking on change and therapeutic action
Level I: Global change in the patient
Anchor points to track changes in the patient
Level I: Conclusions about change and no change in these vignettes
References
Bodily metaphors as anchor points in facilitating change
Key embodied metaphors in the group work on Ms C’s case—Beatriz de León de Bernardi
Discussion—Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber
References
II Change in metaphors and dreams
Changes and no changes in the representation of self and others through images and metaphors
Clinical case: Helena
Metaphors that emerged in the dreams: First level of analysis
Representations of the self and the others: Second level
Conclusions
References
Discussion—Ricardo Bernardi
Notes
References
Changes in dreams in the psychoanalysis of traumatized, chronically depressed patients in the frame of the LAC Depression Study1 applying the 3-LM
Application of the 3-LM in the LAC study:
Summary of the psychoanalytic process with the focus on the changes in the manifest dream contents
Nightmares and early enactments of the trauma in the transference
Approaching aggression
Differentiation between self- and object representations
Mourning, revenge, self-destructiveness, and creativity
Summary and discussion
References
Discussion—Carolyn S. Ellman
Notes
III Foci of the analyst's interventions, mechanisms of change
"I don't want to be like my mother": Exploring changes in identity using the analyst as model
Sequence of changes and interventions in the analysis of a violent patient
IV Impasse
Three hypotheses on impasse in the case of Janine
Change and impasse in a systematic case study: Foci of the analyst's interpretations
V New uses of the 3-LM in the transmission of psychoanalysis and in professional development
The 3-LM's contribution to developments in analytical treatment
A dialogue between 3-LM presenters and moderators
VI Clinical observation groups and the psychoanalysis of children
Observing transformations and interventions in a child analysis through the 3-LM: The case of a 5-year-old girl
How does a 5-year-old cope with mourning? Contributions of the 3-LM for observing child transformations
VII Improving clinical evidence
Assessing strengths and limitations of clinical evidence in a psychoanalytic clinical material
VIII Three-Level Model
Guidelines for organizing 3-LM groups
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