List of Figures |
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xv | |
About the Authors |
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xvi | |
Preface |
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xviii | |
Acknowledgements |
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xx | |
Part I Mother-Infant Communication and Adult Treatment 1 |
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1 The Origins of Relatedness: Film Illustrations |
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3 | (21) |
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Four-Month Face-to-Face Communication and 12-Month Attachment |
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4 | (2) |
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Descriptions of Films of 4-Month Mother-Infant Interactions: "Future" Secure and "Future" Disorganized Dyads |
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6 | (15) |
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Illustrations of Expectancies |
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21 | (1) |
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22 | (2) |
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2 The Organization of Relational Experience in Early Infancy |
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24 | (17) |
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The Representational Newborn |
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25 | (2) |
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27 | (3) |
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"Contingency Detection" from Birth and the Generation of Expectancies |
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30 | (2) |
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Self- and Interactive Regulation as Patterns of Expectancy |
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32 | (1) |
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Presymbolic Representation |
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32 | (1) |
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Summary of Presymbolic, Procedural Forms of Representation |
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33 | (1) |
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Presymbolic Representation and Infant Internal Working Models of Attachment |
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34 | (1) |
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35 | (1) |
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Representation and Internalization |
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36 | (1) |
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Three Principles of Salience Organize Early Representation |
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37 | (1) |
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The Origins of Working Models of Attachment at 4 Months |
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38 | (3) |
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3 The Origins of Relatedness in Disorganized Attachment: Our Approach Months |
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41 | (18) |
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44 | (10) |
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Brief Review of Our Findings on the 4-Month Origins of Disorganized Attachment |
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54 | (5) |
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4 Infant Disorganized Attachment, Young Adult Outcomes, and Adult Treatment |
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59 | (36) |
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Disorganized Attachment in Infancy Predicts Young Adult Dissociation |
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60 | (1) |
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"Map" of Research Linking 4-Month Mother-Infant Communication, 12-18-Month Infant Secure vs. Disorganized Attachment,and Young Adult Outcomes |
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60 | (10) |
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The Adult Clinical Situation |
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70 | (10) |
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Case Vignettes from Adult Treatment |
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80 | (15) |
Part II Mother-Infant Communication, the Origins of Attachment, and Implications for Adult Treatment |
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95 | (62) |
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99 | (5) |
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Future Secure Dyads at 4 Months |
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99 | (3) |
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Origins of Internal Working Models in Future Secure Infants |
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102 | (2) |
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104 | (11) |
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Future Resistant Dyads at 4 Months |
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105 | (1) |
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Differences in Resistant Compared to Secure Infants, by Communication Modality |
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105 | (2) |
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Origins of Internal Working Models in Future Resistant Infants |
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107 | (8) |
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7 Future Disorganized Dyads |
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115 | (24) |
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Future Disorganized vs. Secure Dyads at 4 Months |
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116 | (4) |
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Origins of Internal Working Models in Future Disorganized Infants |
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120 | (9) |
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Knowing and Being Known in the Origins of Disorganized Attachment |
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129 | (3) |
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Internal Working Models of Future Disorganized Infants at 4 Months |
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132 | (1) |
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Comparison of Internal Working Models of Future Resistant vs. Disorganized Infants |
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133 | (6) |
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8 Discussion: Mother-Infant Communication, the Origins of Attachment, and Adult Treatment |
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139 | (18) |
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Self- and Interactive Contingency in Adult Treatment |
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141 | (3) |
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Using the Statistical Analyses to Learn to View Mother-Infant Interactions |
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144 | (1) |
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145 | (1) |
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The Origins of Resistant and Disorganized Attachment at 4 Months |
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146 | (1) |
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Implicit, Procedural Communication in Adult Treatment |
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147 | (2) |
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149 | (2) |
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Knowing and Being Known: Entering the Distressed State of the Other |
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151 | (4) |
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Young Adult Dissociation: Relevance of Our Findings on the 4-Month Origins of Disorganized Attachment |
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155 | (2) |
Part III Discussants: Relevance of the Research to Child and Adult Treatment |
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157 | (40) |
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9 Ronald Fairbairn's Theory of Object Relations and the Microanalysis of Mother-Infant Interaction: A Mutual Enrichment |
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159 | (4) |
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10 Probing to Know and Be Known: Existential and Evolutionary Perspectives on the "Disorganized" Patient's Relationship with the Analyst |
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163 | (9) |
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Re-narrating the "D" Attachment Scenario in Development and Treatment |
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163 | (1) |
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Existential Dread, Multiplicity, and Probing for Realness and Reciprocity |
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163 | (2) |
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Sources of Danger and Safety in the Family: Shared Existential Anxiety, Differing Agendas, Multiplicity, Deception, and Self-Deception |
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165 | (2) |
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Negotiating the Otherness of a Semi-Deity |
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167 | (1) |
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The Capacity to Probe the Other: The Child's Agency in the Attachment Process |
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168 | (1) |
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Probing the Therapist's Existential Anxieties, Multiplicity, and Self-Deception |
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169 | (3) |
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11 On Knowing and Being Known: The Case of Oliver |
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172 | (5) |
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12 Imagining Chloe in Infancy |
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177 | (11) |
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178 | (1) |
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179 | (1) |
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179 | (1) |
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180 | (5) |
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185 | (3) |
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13 From Microseconds to Psychic Structure |
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188 | (9) |
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Issues in the Clinical Application of Developmental Research |
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190 | (1) |
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Linking the Microanalytic with the Macroanalytic: Implications for Psychotherapy Practice |
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191 | (6) |
Appendix A: Coding of Ordinalized Behavioral Scales |
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197 | (4) |
Appendix B: Ordinalized Maternal Touch Scale: From Affectionate to Intrusive |
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201 | (2) |
Appendix C: Mother Touch Codes |
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203 | (2) |
Appendix D: Mother and Infant Engagement Scales |
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205 | (4) |
Appendix E: Definitions of Behavioral Extremes |
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209 | (2) |
References |
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211 | (15) |
Index |
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226 | |