Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science

Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science

ISSN Print: 2160-5866
ISSN Online: 2160-5874
www.scirp.net/journal/jbbs
E-mail: [email protected]
"Experiencing, Psychopathology, and the Tripartite Mind"
written by Douglas Ozier, Chris Westbury,
published by Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science, Vol.3 No.2, 2013
has been cited by the following article(s):
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[1] Therapeutische Verfahren mit Anwendungsbeispielen
Praxis …, 2023
[2] O sentido do trabalho para o profissional de TI: uma abordagem experiencial
2020
[3] O uso da Focalização na Orientação Profissional: uma proposta experiencial
2018
[4] How does psychotherapy work? A case study in multi-level explanation.
2015
[5] Memory reconsolidation and self-reorganization.
Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 2015
[6] Changing maladaptive memories through reconsolidation: a role for sleep in psychotherapy
2015
[7] The nature of the semantic/episodic memory distinction: A missing piece of the “working through” process.
Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 2015
[8] Reconsolidation: Turning consciousness into memory.
Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 2015
[9] Social-psychological evidence for the effective updating of implicit attitudes.
Behavioral & Brain …, 2015
[10] Multiple traces or Fuzzy Traces? Converging evidence for applications of modern cognitive theory to psychotherapy.
Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 2015
[11] Memory reconsolidation, repeating, and working through: Science and culture in psychotherapeutic research and practice.
Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 2015
[12] Top-down versus bottom-up perspectives on clinically significant memory reconsolidation.
Tarlow, J Panksepp - Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 2015
[13] Levels of analysis in neuroscientific studies of emotion: Comment on" The quartet theory of human emotions: an integrative and neurofunctional model" by S. Koelsch et al.
Physics of life reviews, 2015
[14] Stopping the Nightmare: An Analysis of Focusing Oriented Dream Imagery Therapy For Trauma Survivors with Repetitive Nightmares
2015
[15] The importance of the rites of passage in assigning semantic structures to autobiographical memory
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[16] The integrated memory model: A new framework for understanding the mechanisms of change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[17] Psychopathology arises from intertemporal bargaining as well as from emotional trauma
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[18] Memory reconsolidation, repeating, and working through: Science and culture in psychotherapeutic research and practice
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[19] Multiple traces or Fuzzy Traces? Converging evidence for applications of modern cognitive theory to psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[20] Clinical applications of counterfactual thinking during memory reactivation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[21] The relevance of maintaining and worsening processes in psychopathology
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[22] Mental model construction, not just memory, is a central component of cognitive change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[23] Deconstructing the process of change in cognitive behavioral therapy: An alternative approach focusing on the episodic retrieval mode
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[24] How does psychotherapy work? A case study in multilevel explanation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[25] Memory reconsolidation and self-reorganization
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[26] Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: New insights from brain science
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[27] Social-psychological evidence for the effective updating of implicit attitudes
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[28] Minding the findings: Let's not miss the message of memory reconsolidation research for psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[29] The nature of the semantic/episodic memory distinction: A missing piece of the" working through" process
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[30] Reconsolidation: Turning consciousness into memory
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[31] Reconsolidation versus retrieval competition: Rival hypotheses to explain memory change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[32] Emotion regulation as a main mechanism of change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[33] Memory reconsolidation and psychotherapeutic process
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[34] Top-down versus bottom-up perspectives on clinically significant memory reconsolidation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[35] Memory reconsolidation keeps track of emotional changes, but what will explain the actual" processing"?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[36] Reconsolidation or re-association?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[37] How do we remember traumatic events? Exploring the role of neuromodulation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[38] Let's be skeptical about reconsolidation and emotional arousal in therapy
Patihis, L.(2015). Let's be skeptical about reconsolidation and emotion arousal in therapy: Commentary on Lane et al.(2015). Brain & Behavioral Sciences, 2015
[39] Therapeutic affect reduction, emotion regulation, and emotional memory reconsolidation: A neuroscientific quandary
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[40] Trade-offs between the accuracy and integrity of autobiographical narrative in memory reconsolidation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[41] Changing maladaptive memories through reconsolidation: A role for sleep in psychotherapy?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[42] A Clinician's Perspective on Memory Reconsolidation as the Primary Basis for Psychotherapeutic Change in PTSD
The Behavioral and brain sciences, 2015
[43] Disruption of reconsolidation processes is a balancing act-can it really account for change in psychotherapy?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[44] Focus on emotion as a catalyst of memory updating during reconsolidation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[45] Levels of analysis in neuroscientific studies of emotion: Comment on “The quartet theory of human emotions: an integrative and neurofunctional model” by S. …
2015
[46] Social-psychological evidence for the effective updating of implicit attitudes 1
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[47] A clinician's perspective on memory reconsolidation as the primary basis for psychotherapeutic change in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[48] Memory reconsolidation keeps track of emotional changes, but what will explain the actual “processing”?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[49] Levels of analysis in neuroscientific studies of emotion: Comment on “The quartet theory of human emotions: an integrative and neurofunctional model” by …
2015
[50] The nature of the semantic/episodic memory distinction: A missing piece of the “working through” process
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[51] Disruption of reconsolidation processes is a balancing act–can it really account for change in psychotherapy?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[52] A clinician's perspective on memory reconsolidation as the primary basis for psychotherapeutic change in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) 1 …
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[53] Levels of analysis in neuroscientific studies of emotion: Comment on" The quartet theory of human emotions: an integrative and neurofunctional model" by S. Koelsch …
2015
[54] Now you see it, now you don't: on emotion, context, and the algorithmic prediction of human imageability judgments
Frontiers in psychology, 2013
[55] Aesthetic engagement during moments of suffering
Scientific Study of Literature, 2013
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