These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

170 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 21518351)

  • 1. What are your implicit or explicit thoughts about sexuality and how do these thoughts enter the psychoanalytic situation? In other terms how primary is sexuality in your thoughts about the clinical situation? Response by Björn Salomonsson.
    Salomonsson B
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):263-5. PubMed ID: 21518351
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 2. Are there elements (excluding aggression or destructiveness) that are exclusively non-sexual or is sexuality the unifying idea in your concept of transference? To what extent do you consider transference as sexual or to what extent are there non-sexual factors (excluding aggression)? Is desire an equivalent of sexuality in your clinical conceptualizations? Response by Luis Kancyper.
    Kancyper L
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):265-7. PubMed ID: 21518352
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 3. What is your theory of unconscious processes? What are other theories that you would contrast with your conceptualization? Response by Werner Bohleber (Germany).
    Bohleber W
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):285-8. PubMed ID: 21518360
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 4. What is your theory of unconscious processes? What are other theories that you would contrast with your conceptualization? Response by Giuseppe Civitarese.
    Civitarese G
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):277-80. PubMed ID: 21518357
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 5. Are there elements (excluding aggression or destructiveness) that are exclusively non-sexual or is sexuality the unifying idea in your concept of transference? To what extent do you consider transference as sexual or to what extent are there non-sexual factors (excluding aggression)? Is desire an equivalent of sexuality in your clinical conceptualizations? Response by Nancy Kulish (USA).
    Kulish N
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):267-9. PubMed ID: 21518353
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 6. The indivisibility of Freudian object relations and drive theories.
    Spruiell V
    Psychoanal Q; 1988 Oct; 57(4):597-625. PubMed ID: 3212105
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 7. Opening remarks to a discussion of sexuality in contemporary psychoanalysis.
    Green A
    Int J Psychoanal; 1997 Apr; 78 ( Pt 2)():345-50. PubMed ID: 9152759
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 8. What is your theory of unconscious processes? What are other theories that you would contrast with your conceptualization? Response by Jorge Luis Maldonado.
    Maldonado JL
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):280-3. PubMed ID: 21518358
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 9. To what extent do you privilege dream interpretation in relation to other forms of mental representations? Response by Harold P. Blum.
    Blum HP
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):275-7. PubMed ID: 21518356
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 10. The enigmatic signifier and the decentred subject.
    Hinton L
    J Anal Psychol; 2009 Nov; 54(5):637-57. PubMed ID: 19840157
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 11. From "nothing" to "something" to "everything": bisexuality and metaphors of the mind.
    Stimmel B
    J Am Psychoanal Assoc; 1996; 44 Suppl():191-214. PubMed ID: 9170063
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 12. Sexuality, sublimation and psychic activity.
    Amati-Mehler J; Abel-Hirsch N
    Int J Psychoanal; 1998 Aug; 79 ( Pt 4)():802-5. PubMed ID: 9777459
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 13. Psychic change & the analyst as biographer: transference and reconstruction.
    Frank A
    Int J Psychoanal; 1991; 72 ( Pt 1)():22-6. PubMed ID: 2050486
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 14. Further thoughts on: Julie's museum: the evolution of thinking, dreaming and historicization in the treatment of traumatized patients.
    Withers R
    Int J Psychoanal; 2007 Dec; 88(Pt 6):1551-2; author reply 1552-3. PubMed ID: 18055383
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 15. Sexuality panel.
    Frank C
    Int J Psychoanal; 2012 Jun; 93(3):491-3. PubMed ID: 22671260
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 16. [The false love of transference, or the risky love in the analytic situation].
    d'Anjou A
    Soins Psychiatr; 2004; (233):21-2. PubMed ID: 15339100
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 17. The manifest problem as the psychoanalytic unit in the interpretation of dreams.
    Schwartz W
    Int J Psychosom; 1993; 40(1-4):11-3; discussion 14-6. PubMed ID: 8070979
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 18. The psychoanalytic situation: a discussion with Harold Blum and Leo Stone.
    Molofsky M
    Psychoanal Rev; 1990; 77(2):281-4. PubMed ID: 2118669
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 19. The development and organizing function of perversion: the example of transvestism.
    Meyer J
    Int J Psychoanal; 2011 Apr; 92(2):311-32. PubMed ID: 21518362
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 20. The analysis of transference: a critique of Fenichel's Problems of psychoanalytic technique.
    Gill M
    Int J Psychoanal Psychother; 1980-1981; 8():45-56. PubMed ID: 7429721
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

    [Next]    [New Search]
    of 9.