Neurobiology and its Applications to Psychotherapy - II

Neurobiology and its Applications to Psychotherapy – II

With Module Speakers:
Lucy BivenDr Nessa CareyDr Ruth LaniusDr Dianne Campbell LefevreDr Dan SiegelProfessor Mark SolmsDr Sharon StanleyProfessor Oliver TurnbullDr Alan WatkinsHenry Strick van Linschoten,

CE Credits: 14 hours

  • This module includes 12 hours of lectures supported by notes and diagrams
  • Supporting notes slides or references
  • This content is available 24/7 for 1 year per subscription
  • A selection of brief papers summarizing the theoretical history, aetiology, diagnosis and treatment of trauma and dissociation
  • Bibliography
  • Links to selected papers and books

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CONTENT

Lucy Biven
Treating Anxiety: a neuroscientific perspective

This talk offers an understanding of anxiety disorders that rests on research into the emotional systems that we share with all other mammals. Beginning with a brief discussion of Panksepp’s emotional taxonomy, with special emphasiz on the GRIEF, FEAR & SEEKING SYSTEMS, Lucy Biven will explain how one type of anxiety is generated by issues in the FEAR system, while another separate pattern of anxiety is generated by GRIEF. The emotional, behavioral and biochemical aspects of each will be explained. The merits of both psychotherapeutic and psychotropic interventions will be discussed, including the interesting evidence that anxiety rooted in the FEAR system responds to tricyclite antidepressants, while GRIEF-based anxiety is addressed by benzodiazepines.

Video lecture with captions – 25 mins

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Dr Nessa Carey
What is Epigenetics?

Epigenetics refers to any phenomenon which cannot be explained just by referring to the DNA sequence of an organism. Whenever two things have identical DNA, but are different to each other, that is an example of epigenetics in action. This can be seen around us all the time. Think of the limbless maggot and the mature fly it turns into, or identical twins where one develops schizophrenia and the other is completely healthy. In this presentation we will cover examples of epigenetics in action. But we will go further and look at how epigenetic phenomena are controlled. This is carried out by a series of potentially reversible modifications to DNA. They don’t alter what a gene codes for, but they change the expression levels of a gene. These epigenetic modifications can control gene expression for decades, and they provide the crucial mechanistic bridge between nature and nurture.

Video lecture with slides – 43 mins

Epigenetics and Life-Long Events

Epigenetic modifications to genes can be transient, altering gene expression for a short period of time. But some changes are very stable and may last for the entire lifetime of an individual. In this session we will examine some of the evidence that addresses how epigenetics can create and maintain long-term patterns of gene expression, and the potential effects this has. Topics will include the adult consequences of early abuse or neglect, the changes in gene expression that are induced by drugs of addiction and the delayed clinical responses to antidepressants. The potentially reversible nature of epigenetic modifications to genes means that there is the scope for altering these responses, but will this increased mechanistic understanding change practice?

Video lecture with slides – 44 mins

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Dr Ruth Lanius
The neurobiological underpinnings of social cognition in chronically traumatized individuals, with implications for specific, integrated treatment approaches

Childhood maltreatment has been associated with profound deficits in the sense of self frequently leading the traumatized individual to become isolated and estranged in the secrecy of their trauma. Both intimate and non-intimate relationships frequently either become a way of re-enacting the past or appear unreachable. How do mind, brain, and body prevent traumatized individuals from engaging in social interactions, and how does this affect the therapeutic process? This lecture will describe the neurobiological underpinnings of social cognition, including theory of mind and eye gaze in chronically traumatized individuals and relate these findings to clinical case examples. An integrated approach to treatment of brain, mind, and body, including interventions geared to prevent the intergenerational transmission of trauma will be described.

Video lecture with captions and slides – 55 mins

Neuroscientifically-based effective therapeutic interventions for patients displaying altered states of consciousness following trauma

Four dimensions of consciousness, including time, thought, body, and emotion often become drastically altered as a result of traumatic experience. Even though such alterations in consciousness can be adaptive during the encounter of traumatic events, they can frequently lead to tremendous hardship in the aftermath of the trauma. How do we recognize such alterations in consciousness? Is there a dissociative versus a non-dissociative presentation of each dimension of consciousness? What predicts the occurrence of altered states of consciousness? How can we intervene effectively to overcome such altered states and how are those changes represented in mind, brain, and body? This lecture will describe a four dimensional model (4-D Model) outlining a dissociative and a non-dissociative dimension of each of these four dimensions of consciousness. Furthermore, the neurobiological underpinnings and a detailed approach to treatment of each dimension of consciousness will be described.

Video lecture with captions and slides – 57 mins

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Dr Dianne Campbell Lefevre
The impact of inflammatory disorders and the risks for health: an introduction for psychotherapists and psychologists.

Freud said that the ego is first and foremost a body ego. If there can be an equivalent of the Grand Unifying theory for a body, it could be inflammation. Inflammatory processes underlie both physical and mental illnesses and therefore should be a major consideration if we wish to heal, to prevent illness pain and suffering. The interactions between physical and mental states are reflected in the increased morbidity and mortality in chronic psychoses, PTSD, and attachment problems. How do these systems interact?

Video with slides and transcript – 43 mins

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dan-siegel
Dr Dan Siegel
Neuroplasticity and Therapy: the function of relationship in neural integration - Part I

The development of the brain within the body only occurs within the context of supportive relationships across the lifespan. Knowing how relationships support or inhibit the differentiation of the two sides of the brain, the lower and higher neural regions, and the various circuits involved in implicit, explicit, and narrative memory, is the building block of effective therapeutic intervention. With a framework of integration as the core mechanism of health, treatment strategies can be formulated to promote the growth of integrative fibres in the brain that will be those most likely to support movement toward health. First defining the mind as an embodied and relational emergent self-organizing process that regulates the flow of energy and information, we will explore how neuroplasticity, by cultivating differentiation and linkage of neural circuits, becomes the mainstay for therapeutic treatment planning.

Audio lecture with slides – 47 mins

Neuroplasticity and Therapy: the function of relationship in neural integration – Part II

Audio lecture with slides – 1 hr 5 mins

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Mark Solms
Professor Mark Solms
Neuroplasticity: Implications for New Clinical Techniques

Recent research into the brain mechanisms of emotion has identified the primitive ‘natural kinds’ of mammalian emotion. This research reveals some surprising findings about the emotional circuitry of the human brain, which radically change our classifications of the basic emotions, and which have substantial implications for our understanding of psychopathology. This talk will summarize the relevant findings and will discuss the clinical implications, in relation to, for example, addiction, mood disorders, anxiety disorders and thought disorders, and more generally for theories of human sexuality and aggression.

Video with captions and slides – 1 hr 13 mins

Brain mechanisms of emotional consciousness: implications for clinical technique

Most forms of psychoanalytical psychotherapy conceptualize therapeutic change as a process whereby the unconscious parts of the mind are rendered conscious. Classically this involves a clinical technique which endeavors to attach words to preverbal and nonverbal mental processes. This is the essence of the ‘talking cure’. In this presentation, new findings regarding the brain mechanisms of consciousness will be reported which require us to turn the classical conceptualization of talking therapy on its head. The parts of the brain that generate ‘instinctual’ ways of thinking and behaving are the same parts of the brain that generate all consciousness. The parts of the brain that are associated with verbal cognition, by contrast, are intrinsically unconscious and are only capable of generating conscious thinking to the extent that they are activated by the more primitive, instinctual-emotional parts of the brain. Some implications of these findings for psychotherapeutic technique will be discussed.

Video with captions and slides – 51 mins

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sharon-stanley
Dr Sharon Stanley
The Neuroscience of Somatics - background and theory

The last decade has challenged psychotherapists to integrate a massive amount of data and information into their practice with highly vulnerable patients. How do we decide what is essential to adapt to our practice and with specific patients? Here Sharon Stanley outlines the major shifts in terms of relational principles governing psychotherapy today and richly illustrates her presentations with scientific detail.

Video with slides – 54 mins

Somatic Psychotherapeutic Practices

In this video Sharon Stanley covers six aspects of somatic psychotherapy: embodiment, somatic awareness, empathy, enquiry and interventions. She begins by discussing how embodiment opens a path through which we can guide clients in the integration traumatic memories into a tolerable felt sense in the body. A growing sense of embodiment allows practitioners to enter somatic awareness of their own sensory-based experience. This develops intersubjectivity, the exploration of complex emotions and a restoration of vitality. Bodily-based awareness informs the brain about changes in the environment as well as within the muscles, fluids and changes in self-states and, with somatic empathy, we can bridge the chasms that separate human begins into an alive and resonant connection. Differentiating receptive from projective empathy, Dr Stanley illustrates how we can safely enter a shared consciousness that allows each person wordless access into the inner world of the other that a greater potential for healing trauma.

Video with slides – 42 mins

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oliver-turnbull
Professor Oliver Turnbull
The neuroscience of emotion, intuition and decision-making

The relationship between psychotherapy and neuroscience – long rather static while the two fields appeared to have different interests and methods – is rapidly changing. This change has been primarily because topics that have long been of interest to the psychotherapeutic community, most especially emotion, have now become viable matters for mainstream neuroscientific investigation. While emotion has often been regarded as a negative force for human decision-making, there are times when emotion is essential in order for human beings to make sensible choices. The basis for the phenomenon appears to be the hunches that we often generate about complex problems, typically described as intuition – a source of knowledge has a vital role to play in creativity and imagination. These talks will review scientific investigations on these borderlands between psychoanalyzis and neuroscience, particularly in the domains of emotion, intuition, and the role of both in delusional beliefs.

Video with slides – 1 hr 20 mins

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alan-watkins
Dr Alan Watkins
The Psychophysiology of Affect Dysregulation

Having understood the sophistication, boundary-less complexity of human health and the pathogenesis of dis-ease, whether that be chronic inflammation of something more, it will be proposed that there are a number of integrated regulatory pathways that link cognitive, psycho-emotional and physiological processes. These are introduced, with particular reference to the role of the autonomic nervous system and neuroendocrine pathways in regulating health or bringing on disease. Suggestions on how mental health practitioners can understand and support their clients’ in having healthy psychophysiology are offered.

Video with slides – 37 mins

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FEES (USD)

Includes a test and CE Certificate of Attendance

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Self-funded:
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Organizationally-funded:
$280

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$135 per user

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$85 per student

CE

Continuing Education (CE) credits for 14 hours are available as part of the course fee. You will need to fill out an evaluation form and pass a multiple choice questionnaire related to the content in order to receive your certificate.  You can submit this test up to a maximum of 5 times.

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MODULE
INCLUDES

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  1. To be able to describe the inflammatory process as a response to stress, and to outline at least 2 impacts on the systems of the body (autonomic nervous system, HPA axis, neuroendocrinology)
  2. To be able to explain human vulnerability to stress and distinguish developmental factors from adult experiences
  3. To further understand the interaction between emotion and physiology and to be able to discuss at least 2 current theories on the relationship between the mind and physiology
  4. To be able to explain recent findings on the relationship between diet and the inflammatory response, and cite 3-4 links
  5. To explain the relationship between stress and immunity
  6. To be able elaborate the concept of somatised trauma
  7. To be able to understand and explain the concept of epigenetic change and distinguish this from DNA mutation

STUDY GUIDES

The following brief papers provide a summary of the main issues in the field of Neurobiology and its Applications to Psychotherapy

  • Scientific method and neurobiology
  • Some Historical Origins of Neurobiology
  • Neuroplasticity
  • Controversy: the mind-body divide
  • The sources of neuroscientific knowledge
  • The neurobiological basis of human relationships
  • Controversies: drugs versus talking therapies
  • Controversies: Genetic and environmental influences
  • The neurobiological contribution to psychotherapy
  • Some basics of human biology
  • Neuroanatomical vocabulary and concepts
  • Study tips

Authored by Henry Strick van Linschoten