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Neuroscience of Enduring Change presents the first brain-based theory of how enduring change occurs in psychotherapy, the latest research evidence supporting it, a discussion of the application to several leading forms of psychotherapy, and a description of the research agenda going forward.
List of contents
- Overview
- 1. Lynn Nadel and Richard D. Lane. Neuroscience of Enduring Change and Psychotherapy:
- An Introduction
- Basic Science Perspectives
- 2. Lynn Nadel. What is a Memory That It Can Be Changed?
- 3. Ryan Smith. The Three-Process Model of Implicit and Explicit Emotion
- 4. Ajay B. Satpute, Erik C. Nook and Melis E. Cakar. The Role of Language in the Construction
- of Emotion and Memory: A Predictive Coding View
- 5. Jessica R. Andrews-Hanna, Kalina Christoff and Mary-Frances O'Connor. Dynamic
- Regulation of Internal Experience: Mechanisms of Therapeutic Change
- 6. Joseph E. Dunsmoor and Marijn C.W. Kroes. Emotion-memory interactions: implications for
- the reconsolidation of negative memories
- 7. Jessica D. Payne. Stress and sleep interact to selectively consolidate and transform negative
- emotional memories: Implications for Clinical Treatment
- 8. Matthew D. Grilli and Lee Ryan. Autobiographical Memory and the Self-Concept
- Clinical Psychotherapy Perspectives
- 9. Antonio Pascual-Leone and Leslie S. Greenberg. Emotion Focused Therapy: Integrating
- Neuroscience and Practice
- 10. Jonathan D. Huppert, Isaac Fradkin and Shawn P. Cahill. CBT for anxiety disorders:
- Memory reconsolidation theory and its relationship to cognitive, emotional processing, and
- inhibitory models
- 11. Bruce Ecker. Erasing Problematic Emotional Learnings: Psychotherapeutic Use of Memory
- Reconsolidation Research
- 12. Hanna Levenson, Lynne Angus and Erica Pool. Viewing Psychodynamic/Interpersonal
- Theory and Practice through the Lens of Memory Reconsolidation
- 13. Rhonda Goldman and Alyssa Fredrick-Keniston. Memory Reconsolidation as a Common
- Change Process: Moving Toward an Integrative Model of Psychotherapy
- Integrative Perspectives
- 14. Richard D. Lane. The Affective Origin and Treatment of Recurrent Maladaptive Patterns
- 15. Ryan Smith, Richard D. Lane, Lynn Nadel, and Michael Moutoussis. A computational
- neuroscience perspective on the change process in psychotherapy
- 16. Richard D. Lane, Ryan Smith and Lynn Nadel. Neuroscience of Enduring Change and
- Psychotherapy: Summary, Conclusions and Future Directions
About the author
Richard D. Lane is a clinical psychiatrist and psychotherapist trained in cognitive neuroscience and emotion research whose research has focused on brain mechanisms of emotion and emotion regulation, emotional awareness, neurovisceral integration and the mechanisms by which emotion influences susceptibility to sudden cardiac death. His background in cognitive and affective neuroscience is now being integrated with his ongoing experience as a therapist and psychotherapy educator.
Lynn Nadel is a contributor to the literature on the hippocampus and its role in spatial memory, cognition, and consolidation, in humans and other animals. An active and influential contributor to the field for about 40 years who has advanced two influential theories of hippocampal function: Cognitive Map Theory and Multiple Trace Theory.
Summary
Neuroscience of Enduring Change presents the first brain-based theory of how enduring change occurs in psychotherapy, the latest research evidence supporting it, a discussion of the application to several leading forms of psychotherapy, and a description of the research agenda going forward.
Additional text
Psychotherapy is a learning process, a way of changing mind and behavior by forming new memories. With contributions by basic scientists and clinicians, The Neuroscience of Enduring Change builds on the science of memory to offer valuable new insights into how the effects of therapy might be made more persistent.