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Current interdisciplinary perspectives: between neurosciences and psychoanalysis of babies
Actividad N° 002
jueves 20 de octubre / 11,45 AM

09:45 MX, PE, EC / 11:45 BR / 10:45 NY / 15:45 POR, UK / 16:45 IT-ES-FR-SZ


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Panelist/s: Mark Solms (BPS-UK / APsaA-USA / SAPA-SA), François Ansermet (Switzerland), Juan Pablo Jiménez (APSAN-Chile).
Chair: Germán Weisbrot
Coord. Zoom: Alejandra Doretti & Nora Woscoboinik

 

Guest panelists
Gabriela Goldstein
APA
Mark Solms
South Africa
Virginia Ungar
Argentine
Bernard Golse
France
Florence Guignard
Switzerland
Miri Keren
Israel
Leticia Glocer
Argentine
Suzanne Maiello
Italy
Christine Anzieu-Premmereur
United States
Ricardo Bernardi
Uruguay
Clara Schejtman
Argentine
Elizabeth Palacios
Spain
Humberto Persano
Argentine
Susana Fischbein
Argentine
Alicia Lisondo
Brazil
Analía Wald
Argentine
Norberto Giglio
Argentine
Daniel Camparo Avila
Uruguay
Stefano Bolognini
Italy
Fernando Gómez
APA
Cristina Rosas
APA
Edward Tronick
United States
François Richard
France
Fernando Fernández Castro
Mexico
François Ansermet
Switzerland
Rogerio Lerner
Brazil
Filippo Muratori
Italy
Marie Christine Laznik
France
Aline Pinto Da Silva
Brazil
Juan Pablo Jiménez
Chile
Avgi Saketopoulou
Chipre-Grecia
Marina Altmann de Litvan
Uruguay

 

 

 

 

 

The panelists' cv
Gabriela Goldstein
Argentina
Mark Solms
Sudáfrica
Virginia Ungar
Argentina
Bernard Golse
Francia
Florence Guignard
Suiza
Christine Anzieu-Premmereur
Estados Unidos
Leticia Glocer
Argentina
Ricardo Bernardi
Uruguay
Miri Keren
Israel
Suzanne Maiello
Italia
Clara Schejtman
Argentina
Elizabeth Palacios
España
Susana Fischbein
Argentina
Humberto Persano
Argentina
Alicia Lisondo
Brasil
Norberto Giglio
Argentina
Daniel Camparo Avila
Uruguay
Analía Wald
Argentina
Cristina Rosas
APA
Stefano Bolognini
Italia
Fernando Gómez
Argentina
François Richard
Francia
Edward Tronick
Estados Unidos
Fernando Fernández Castro
México
Aline Pinto Da Silva
Brasil
Filippo Muratori
Italia
François Ansermet
Suiza
Rogerio Lerner
Brasil
Marie Christine Laznik
Francia
Juan Pablo Jiménez
Chile
Avgi Saketopoulou
Cyprus-Greece
Marina Altmann de Litvan
Uruguay

 




More

MARK SOLMS - SOUTH AFRICA / UNITED KINDOM
The drive to play.
Summary

In this talk I will introduce the mammalian drive to play and its implications for human development. I will focus in particular on the implications of this drive for object relations theory, the theory of the Oedipus complex, and the concept of narcissism.

 

FRANÇOIS ANSERMET - SWITZERLAND
Neuronal plasticity: infancy and the paradoxes of an ever-changing brain

The neurobiological evidence for plasticity, which demonstrates that experience leaves a structural and functional trace in neuronal networks, introduces a new dialectic between the biological and psychological causality of mental phenomena. Such evidence has inspired current views that posit that psychological events may shape synaptic organization.
Plasticity shows that neuronal networks remain open to change, to contingency: the brain must thus be thought of as a highly dynamic organ in permanent interaction with the environment as well as with the psychological life of the subject. Thus, plasticity always modifies what has come before and therefore keeps the subject open to the unpredictable and facilitates the construction of individuality. Here, I make the argument that evidence for plasticity entails moving on to a new paradigm.  If neuronal networks are constitutively endowed with the capacity for their own modification, and if the subject participates in his/her own emergence, then it follows that neuroscience embodies, like psychoanalysis, the notions of uniqueness and diversity. As such, neuroscience and psychoanalysis converge on the question of the emergence of individuality, a point where these two fields can mutually instruct one another.
I will discuss the power of the paradigm shift brought about by the evidence for plasticity, through which contingent experience constantly modifies not only the brain, but also the process of becoming for each evolving subject. 

JUAN PABLO JIMENEZ - CHILE
Interpersonal affective regulation: From the early mother-baby relationship to the analytic relationship. An interdisciplinary approach.
Summary

Daniel Stern coined the distinction between the "clinical infant" and the "observational infant", inaugurating a prolific line of research that has had a great impact on psychoanalytic theory and practice. Following this distinction, MIDAP has been developing research on the "observational therapeutic relationship", whose methods, results and clinical applications are summarised in this presentation. In the same way, the study of early life adversities and disturbances in critical periods of development has given rise to a new discipline, developmental psychopathology. Another line of MIDAP research focuses precisely on the study of the epigenetic impact of such disturbances on adult mental health pathology. We will present a pilot study showing how psychotherapy is able to transform epigenetic indicators, inherited from early adversity, in a sample of borderline adolescents in psychotherapy. Thus coming full circle: the therapeutic relationship can be an opportunity for healing from early trauma.








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