Chapter 12 of Clinical Psychology
Free Association
A therapy technique in which psychodynamic psychotherapists simply ask clients to say whatever comes to mind without censoring themselves at all
Psychodynamic psychotherapy refers broadly to the approach authored by _____ and all subsequent adaptations or expansions of it
Sigmund Freud
Displacement
When the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can displace the id impulse toward a safer target - rather than aiming the id's desired action at whom or what it wants, we redirect the impulse toward another person or object to minimize the repercussions
Time Limited Dynamic Psychotherapy
form of psychodynamic psychotherapy in which the therapist makes efforts to form a "corrective" relationship with the client that does not follow the same unconscious "script" as the client's previous problematic relationships
The term _____ succinctly captures the primary goal of psychodynamic psychotherapy
insight
Ego
is a mediator, a compromise maker between the id and the superego
Superego
is the part of the mind that establishes rules, restrictions, and prohibitions
Id
is the part of the mind that generates all the pleasure-seeking, selfish, indulgent, animalistic impulses
Anal Stage
occurring when the child is about 1/5 to 3 years old
Interpersonal Therapy
originally created to treat depression, but it has since been used to treat numerous other disorders - improving the client's relationships with others will facilitate improvement in the client's depressive symptoms
Allegiance Effects
refer to the influence of researchers' own biases and preferences on the outcome of their empirical studies
Transference
refers to clients' tendency to form relationships with therapists in which they unconsciously and unrealistically expect the therapist to behave like important people from the clients' past
Fixation
refers to the idea that as children move through the developmental stages, they may become emotionally "stuck" at any one of them to some extent and may continue to struggle with issues related to that stage of many years, often well into adulthood
Oral Stage
takes place during roughly the first year and a half of a child's life
Phallic Stage
taking place from about age 3 to 6
manifest content
the actual plot of the dream as we remember it
Repression
the ego can take the impulse and the internal conflict it creates and "sweep them under the rug" - denial
latent content
the raw thoughts and feelings of the unconscious
The primary goal of psychodynamic psychotherapy is
to make the unconscious conscious
dream work
uses symbols to express wishes
a Freudian slip
verbal or behavioral mistakes determined, according to psychodynamic psychotherapists, by unconscious motivations
Resistance
when certain issues come up during therapy, clients make it clear that they "don't want to go there"
reaction formation
when the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can form a reaction against the id impulse - essentially, do the exact opposite
Projection
when the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can project the id impulse onto other people around us
Sublimation
when the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can redirect the impulse in such a way that the resulting behavior actually benefits others