Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T04:08:51.815Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: New insights from brain science

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2014

Richard D. Lane
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85724-5002; Departments of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721. lane@email.arizona.edu
Lee Ryan
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721. ryant@email.arizona.edu
Lynn Nadel
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721. nadel@email.arizona.edu
Leslie Greenberg
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada. lgrnberg@yorku.ca

Abstract

Since Freud, clinicians have understood that disturbing memories contribute to psychopathology and that new emotional experiences contribute to therapeutic change. Yet, controversy remains about what is truly essential to bring about psychotherapeutic change. Mounting evidence from empirical studies suggests that emotional arousal is a key ingredient in therapeutic change in many modalities. In addition, memory seems to play an important role but there is a lack of consensus on the role of understanding what happened in the past in bringing about therapeutic change. The core idea of this paper is that therapeutic change in a variety of modalities, including behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, emotion-focused therapy, and psychodynamic psychotherapy, results from the updating of prior emotional memories through a process of reconsolidation that incorporates new emotional experiences. We present an integrated memory model with three interactive components – autobiographical (event) memories, semantic structures, and emotional responses – supported by emerging evidence from cognitive neuroscience on implicit and explicit emotion, implicit and explicit memory, emotion-memory interactions, memory reconsolidation, and the relationship between autobiographical and semantic memory. We propose that the essential ingredients of therapeutic change include: (1) reactivating old memories; (2) engaging in new emotional experiences that are incorporated into these reactivated memories via the process of reconsolidation; and (3) reinforcing the integrated memory structure by practicing a new way of behaving and experiencing the world in a variety of contexts. The implications of this new, neurobiologically grounded synthesis for research, clinical practice, and teaching are discussed.

Type
Target Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbass, A. (2002) Office based research in ISTDP: Data from the first 6 years of practice. Ad Hoc Bulletin of Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy 6:514.Google Scholar
Abelson, J. L., Khan, S., Young, E. A. & Liberzon, I. (2010) Cognitive modulation of endocrine responses to CRH stimulation in healthy subjects. Psychoneuroendocrinology 35:451–59.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aggleton, J. P. & Brown, M. W. (1999) Episodic memory, amnesia, and the hippocampal-anterior thalamic axis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22:425–89.Google Scholar
Alexander, F. & French, T. M. (1946) The corrective emotional experience. In: Psychoanalytic therapy: Principles and application. Ronald.Google Scholar
Allen, J. G. (2013) Mentalizing in the development and treatment of attachment trauma. Karnac.Google Scholar
American Psychiatric Association (2013) Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, fifth edition. American Psychiatric Association.Google Scholar
Amodio, D. M. & Frith, C. D. (2006) Meeting of minds: The medial frontal cortex and social cognition. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7:268–77.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Auszra, L., Greenberg, L. & Herrmann, I. (2013) Client emotional productivity – optimal client in-session emotional processing in experiential therapy. Psychotherapy Research 23(6):732–46.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barrett, L. F., Mesquita, B., Ochsner, K. N. & Gross, J. J. (2007) The experience of emotion. Annual Review of Psychology 58:373403.Google Scholar
Barsalou, L. W. (1988) The content and organization of autobiographical memories. In: Remembering reconsidered: Ecological and traditional approaches to the study of memory, ed. Neisser, U. & Winograd, E., pp. 193243. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bartlett, F. C. (1932) Remembering: A study in experimental and social psychology. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Beck, A. T. (1979) Cognitive therapy and the emotional disorders. International Universities Press.Google Scholar
Beck, A. T., Rush, A. J., Shaw, B. E. & Emery, G. (1979) Cognitive therapy of depression. Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Bergman, E. T. & Roediger, H. L. III (1999) Can Bartlett's repeated reproduction experiments be replicated? Memory and Cognition 27:937–47.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Berntsen, D. & Rubin, D. C. (2006) The Centrality of Event Scale: A measure of integrating a trauma into one's identity and its relation to post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms. Behaviour Research and Therapy 44(2):219–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berntsen, D. & Thomsen, D. K. (2005) Personal memories for remote historical events: Accuracy and clarity of flashbulb memories related to World War II. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 134:242–57.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bootzin, R. R. & Epstein, D. R. (2011) Understanding and treating insomnia. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology 7:435–58.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Borkovec, T. D. & Sides, J. K. (1979) Critical procedural variables related to the physiological effects of progressive relaxation: A review. Behaviour Research and Therapy 17:119–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bornstein, R. F. (2001) The impending death of psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic Psychology 18(1):320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brenner, C. (1973) An elementary textbook of psychoanalysis. International Universities Press.Google Scholar
Breuer, J. & Freud, S. (1895/1955) Studies on hysteria. In: Standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud, ed. Strachey, J.. Hogarth Press. (Original work published in 1895.)Google Scholar
Brunet, A., Orr, S. P., Tremblay, J., Robertson, K., Nader, K. & Pitman, R. K. (2008) Effect of post-retrieval propranolol on psychophysiologic responding during subsequent script-driven traumatic imagery in post-traumatic stress disorder. Journal of Psychiatric Research 42:503–6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burke, A., Heuer, F. & Reisberg, D. (1992) Remembering emotional events. Memory and Cognition 20:277–90.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bushman, B. J. (2002) Does venting anger feed or extinguish the flame? Catharsis, rumination, distraction, anger and aggressive responding. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 28:724–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butler, A. C., Chapman, J. E., Forman, E. M. & Beck, A. T. (2006) The empirical status of cognitive-behavioral therapy: A review of meta-analyses. Clinical Psychology Review 26:1731.Google Scholar
Cahill, L. (2000) Neurobiological mechanisms of emotionally influenced, long-term memory. Progress in Brain Research 126:2937. Available at: http://doi.org/10.1016/S0079-6123(00)26004-4.Google Scholar
Campbell, J., Nadel, L., Duke, D. & Ryan, L. (2011) Remembering all that and then some: Recollection of autobiographical memories after a 1-year delay. Memory 19:406–15.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carryer, J. & Greenberg, L. (2010) Optimal levels of emotional arousal in experiential therapy of depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 78:190–99.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Castonguay, L. G., Goldfried, M. R., Wiser, S., Raue, P. J. & Hayes, A. M. (1996) Predicting the effect of cognitive therapy for depression: A study of unique and common factors. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 64:497504.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Christianson, S. (1992) Emotional stress and eyewitness memory: A critical review. Psychological Bulletin 112:284309.Google Scholar
Christianson, S. & Loftus, E. (1991) Remembering emotional events: The fate of detailed information. Cognition and Emotion 5:81108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clore, G. L. & Ortony, A. (2000) Cognition in emotion: Always, sometimes or never? In: Cognitive neuroscience of emotion, ed. Lane, R. & Nadel, L., pp. 2461. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Clyman, R. B. (1991) The procedural organization of emotions: A contribution from cognitive science to the psychoanalytic theory of therapeutic action. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 39:349–82.Google Scholar
Cohen, G., Conway, M. A. & Maylor, E. A. (1994) Flashbulb memories in older adults. Psychology and Aging 9:454–63.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Coluccia, E., Bianco, C. & Brandimonte, M. A. (2006) Dissociating veridicality, consistency, and confidence in autobiographical and event memories for the Columbia shuttle disaster. Memory 14:452–70.Google Scholar
Coombs, M. M., Coleman, D. & Jones, E. E. (2002) Working with feelings: The importance of emotion in both cognitive-behavioral and interpersonal therapy in the NIMH treatment of depression collaborative research program. Psychotherapy Theory, Research, Practice, Training 39:233–44.Google Scholar
Darwin, C. (1872) The expression of the emotions in man and animals. John Murray.Google Scholar
Davidson, P., Cook, S. P. & Glisky, E. L. (2006) Flashbulb memories for September 11th can be preserved in older adults. Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition: A Journal on Normal and Dysfunctional Development 13:196206.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Boer, S. F. & Koolhaas, J. M. (2003) Defensive burying in rodents: Ethology, neurobiology and psychopharmacology. European Journal of Pharmacology 463:145–61.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de la Fuente, V., Freudenthal, R. & Romano, A. (2011) Reconsolidation or extinction: Transcription factor switch in the determination of memory course after retrieval. Journal of Neuroscience 31:5562–73.Google Scholar
de Quervain, D. J., Henke, K., Aerni, A., Treyer, V., McGaugh, J. L., Berthold, T., Nitsch, R. M., Buck, A., Roozendaal, B. & Hock, C. (2003) Glucocorticoid-induced impairment of declarative memory retrieval is associated with reduced blood flow in the medial temporal lobe. The European Journal of Neuroscience 17:1296–302.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de Quervain, D. J., Roozendaal, B., Nitsch, R. M., McGaugh, J. L. & Hock, C. (2000) Acute cortisone administration impairs retrieval of long-term declarative memory in humans. Nature Neuroscience 3:313–4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Debiec, J. & Ledoux, J. E. (2004) Disruption of reconsolidation but not consolidation of auditory fear conditioning by noradrenergic blockade in the amygdala. Neuroscience 129:267–72.Google Scholar
Diamond, D. M., Campbell, A. M., Park, C. R., Halonen, J. & Zoladz, P. R. (2007) The temporal dynamics model of emotional memory processing: A synthesis on the neurobiological basis of stress-induced amnesia, flashbulb and traumatic memories, and the Yerkes-Dodson law. Neural Plasticity 2007:133.Google Scholar
Diekelmann, S., Wilhelm, I. & Born, J. (2009) The whats and whens of sleep-dependent memory consolidation. Sleep Medicine Reviews 13:309–21.Google Scholar
Dobson, K. S. (2009) Handbook of cognitive-behavioral therapies, third edition. Guilford.Google Scholar
Dudai, Y. (2004) The neurobiology of consolidation, or, how stable is the engram? Annual Review of Psychology 55:5186.Google Scholar
Ecker, B., Ticic, R. & Hulley, L. (2012) Unlocking the emotional brain: Eliminating symptoms at their roots using memory reconsolidation. Routledge.Google Scholar
Edelman, G. M. (1989) The remembered present: A biological theory of consciousness. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Eich, E., Macaulay, D. & Ryan, L. (1994) Mood dependent memory for events of the personal past. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 123:201–15.Google Scholar
Ellis, A. (1962) Reason and emotion in psychotherapy. Lyle Stuart.Google Scholar
Erdelyi, M. H. (2006) The unified theory of repression. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29(5):499510.Google Scholar
Esterson, A. (2002) The myth of Freud's ostracism by the medical community in 1896–1905: Jeffrey Masson's assault on truth. History of Psychology 5(2):115–34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eysenck, H. J. (1960) Behaviour therapy and the neuroses. Pergamon.Google Scholar
Foa, E. B. (2009) Effective treatments for PTSD: Practice guidelines from the international society for traumatic stress studies. Guilford.Google Scholar
Foa, E. B. & Kozak, M. J. (1986) Emotional processing of fear: Exposure to corrective information. Psychological Bulletin 99:2035.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Foa, E. B. & Kozak, M. J. (1998) Clinical applications of bio-informational theory: Understanding anxiety and its treatment. Behavior Therapy 29:675–90.Google Scholar
Foa, E. B., Riggs, D. S., Massie, E. D. & Yarczower, M. (1995) The impact of fear activation and anger on the efficacy of exposure treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder. Behavior Therapy 26:487–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foa, E. B., Rothbaum, B. O. & Furr, J. M. (2003) Augmenting exposure therapy with other CBT procedures. Psychiatric Annals 33:4753.Google Scholar
Foa, E. B., Steketee, G. & Rothbaum, B. O. (1989) Behavioral/cognitive conceptualizations of post-traumatic stress disorder. Behavior Therapy 20:155–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fosha, D. (2000) The transforming power of affect: A model for accelerated change. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Frank, J. D. (1974a) Persuasion and healing: A comparative study of psychotherapy. Schocken Books.Google Scholar
Frank, J. D. (1974b) Psychotherapy: The restoration of morale. American Journal of Psychiatry 131:271–4.Google Scholar
Freud, S. (1913/1958) Papers on technique: On beginning the treatment (Further recommendations on the technique of psycho-analysis, I). In: The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud, ed. Strachey, J.. Hogarth. (Original work published in 1913.)Google Scholar
Freud, S. (1914/1958) Papers on technique: Remembering, repeating, and working-through (Further recommendations on the technique of psycho-analysis, II). In: The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud, ed. Strachey, J.. Hogarth. (Original work published in 1914.)Google Scholar
Freud, S. (1923/1961) The ego and the id. In: The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud, ed. Strachey, J., pp. 166. Hogarth Press. (Original work published in 1923.)Google Scholar
Frijda, N. H. (1986) The emotions. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Friston, K. (2010) The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory? Nature Reviews Neuroscience 11:127–38.Google Scholar
Frith, C. D. & Frith, U. (2012) Mechanisms of social cognition. Annual Review of Psychology 63:287313.Google Scholar
Gazzaniga, M. (1998) The mind's past. University of California Press.Google Scholar
Gergely, G. & Watson, J. S. (1996) The social biofeedback theory of parental affect-monitoring: The development of emotional self-awareness and self-control in infancy. The International Journal of Psychoanalysis 77(6):1181–212.Google Scholar
Gilboa-Schechtman, E. & Foa, E. B. (2001) Patterns of recovery from trauma: The use of intraindividual analysis. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 110:392400.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gleaves, D. H. & Hernandez, E. (1999) Recent reformulations of Freud's development and abandonment of his seduction theory: Historical/scientific clarification or a continued assault on truth? History of Psychology 2(4):324–54.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Goldberger, M. (1995) The couch as defense and as potential for enactment. The Psychoanalytic Quarterly 64:2342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldman, R. N., Greenberg, L. S. & Pos, A. E. (2005) Depth of emotional experience and outcome. Psychotherapy Research 15:238–49.Google Scholar
Graf, P. & Schacter, D. L. (1985) Implicit and explicit memory for new associations in normal and amnesic subjects. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 11:501–18.Google ScholarPubMed
Greenberg, L. S. (2002) Emotion-focused therapy: Coaching clients to work through their feelings. APA Press.Google Scholar
Greenberg, L. S. (2010) Emotion-focused therapy: Theory and practice. APA Press.Google Scholar
Greenberg, L. S. & Pascual-Leone, A. (2006) Emotion in psychotherapy: A practice-friendly research review. Journal of Clinical Psychology: In Session 62:611–30.Google Scholar
Hardt, O., Einarsson, E. O. & Nader, K. (2010) A bridge over troubled water: Reconsolidation as a link between cognitive and neuroscientific memory research traditions. Annual Review of Psychology 61:141–67.Google Scholar
Heider, K. G. (1988) The Rashomon effect: When ethnographers disagree. American Anthropologist 90:7381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hirst, W., Phelps, E. A., Buckner, R. L., Budson, A. E., Cuc, A., Gabrieli, J. D., Johnson, M. K., Lustig, C., Lyle, K. B., Mather, M., Meksin, R., Mitchell, K. J, Ochsner, K. N., Schacter, D. L., Simons, J. S. & Vaidya, C. J. (2009) Long-term memory for the terrorist attack of September 11: Flashbulb memories, event memories, and the factors that influence their retention. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 138(2):161.Google ScholarPubMed
Hofmann, S. G., Asmundson, G. J. G. & Beck, A. T. (2013) The science of cognitive therapy. Behavior Therapy 44:199212.Google Scholar
Horvath, A. O. & Luborsky, L (1993) The role of the therapeutic alliance in psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 61(4):561–73.Google Scholar
Hoscheidt, S., Dongaonkar, B., Payne, J. & Nadel, L. (2013) Emotion, stress, and memory. In: Oxford handbook of cognitive psychology, ed. Reisberg, D., pp. 557–70. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hupbach, A., Gomez, R., Hardt, O. & Nadel, L. (2007) Reconsolidation of episodic memories: A subtle reminder triggers integration of new information. Learning and Memory 14(1–2):4753. Available at: http://doi.org/10.1101/lm.365707.Google Scholar
Hupbach, A., Hardt, O., Gomez, R. & Nadel, L. (2008) The dynamics of memory: Context-dependent updating. Learning and Memory 15(8):574–79. Available at: http://doi.org/10.1101/lm.1022308.Google Scholar
Inda, M. C., Muravieva, E. V. & Alberini, C. M. (2011) Memory retrieval and the passage of time: From reconsolidation and strengthening to extinction. Journal of Neuroscience 31:1635–43.Google Scholar
Jaycox, L. H., Foa, E. B. & Morral, A. R. (1998) Influence of emotional engagement and habituation on exposure therapy for PTSD. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 66:185–92.Google Scholar
Jones, E. E. & Pulos, S. M. (1993) Comparing the process in psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioral therapies. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 61:306–16.Google Scholar
Kazdin, A. (2006) Mediators and mechanisms of change in psychotherapy research. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology 3:127.Google Scholar
Keysers, C. & Gazzola, V. (2006) Towards a unifying neural theory of social cognition. Progress in Brain Research 156:379401.Google Scholar
Kihlstrom, J. F., Mulvaney, S., Tobias, B. A. & Tobis, I. P. (2000) The emotional unconscious. In: Cognition and emotion, ed. Eich, E., Kihlstrom, J. F., Bower, G. H., Forgas, J. P. & Niedenthal, P. M., pp. 3086. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Kim, J. J. & Diamond, D. M. (2002) The stressed hippocampus, synaptic plasticity and lost memories. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 3:453–62.Google Scholar
Klein, M. H., Mathieu-Coughlan, P. & Kiesler, D. J. (1986) The Experiencing Scale. In: The psychotherapeutic process: A research handbook, ed. Greenberg, L. S. & Pinsof, M., pp. 2171. Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Klein, S. B., Cosmides, L., Tooby, J. & Chance, S. (2002) Decisions and the evolution of memory: Multiple systems, multiple functions. Psychological Review 2:306–29.Google Scholar
Kolber, A. J. (2006) Therapeutic forgetting: The legal and ethical implications of memory dampening. Vanderbilt Law Review 59:1561–626.Google Scholar
Kozak, M. J., Foa, E. B. & Steketee, G. (1988) Process and outcome of exposure treatment with obsessive-compulsives: Psychophysiological indicators of emotional processing. Behavior Therapy 19:157–69.Google Scholar
Kramer, R. (1995) The birth of client-centered therapy. Journal of Humanistic Psychology 35:54110.Google Scholar
Kuhlmann, S., Kirschbaum, C. & Wolf, O. T. (2005a) Effects of oral cortisol treatment in healthy young women on memory retrieval of negative and neutral words. Neurobiology of Learning and Memory 83:158–62.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kuhlmann, S., Piel, M. & Wolf, O. T. (2005b) Impaired memory retrieval after psychosocial stress in healthy young men. The Journal of Neuroscience: The Official Journal of the Society for Neuroscience 25:2977–82.Google Scholar
Labar, K. S. & Cabeza, R. (2006) Cognitive neuroscience of emotional memory. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 7:5464.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lambert, M. J., Bergin, A. E. & Garfield, S. L. (2004) Introduction and historical overview. In: Bergin and Garfield's handbook of psychotherapy and behavior change, ed. Lambert, M. J., pp. 315. Wiley.Google Scholar
Lambie, J. A. & Marcel, A. J. (2002) Consciousness and the varieties of emotion experience: A theoretical framework. Psychological Review 109(2):219–59.Google Scholar
Landauer, T. K. & Dumais, S. T. (1997) A solution to Plato's problem: The latent semantic analysis theory of acquisition, induction, and representation of knowledge. Psychological Review 104:211–40.Google Scholar
Lane, R. (2000) Neural correlates of conscious emotional experience In: Cognitive neuroscience of emotion, ed. Lane, R., Nadel, L., pp. 345–70. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lane, R. D. (2008) Neural substrates of implicit and explicit emotional processes: A unifying framework for psychosomatic medicine. Psychosomatic Medicine 70:214–31.Google Scholar
Lane, R. D. & Garfield, D. A. (2005) Becoming aware of feelings: Integration of cognitive-developmental, neuroscientific, and psychoanalytic perspectives. Neuropsychoanalysis 7:530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lane, R. D., McRae, K., Reiman, E. M., Chen, K., Ahern, G. L. & Thayer, J. F. (2009) Neural correlates of heart rate variability during emotion. NeuroImage 44:213–22.Google Scholar
Lane, R. D., Weihs, K. L. (2010) Freud's antiquities. Psychodynamic Practice 16:7778.Google Scholar
Lang, P. J., Cuthbert, B. N. & Bradley, M. M. (1998) Measuring emotion in therapy: Imagery, activation and feeling. Behavior Therapy 29:655–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeDoux, J. (1996) The emotional brain: The mysterious underpinnings of emotional life. Simon and Schuster.Google Scholar
Leichsenring, F. & Rabung, S. (2008) Effectiveness of long-term psychodynamic psychotherapy: A meta-analysis. Journal of the American Medical Association 300(13):1551–65.Google Scholar
Levenson, R. W. (1994) Human emotion: A functional view. In: The nature of emotion – fundamental questions, ed. Elkman, P. & Davidson, R. J., pp. 123–26. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Levine, H. B. (2012) The colourless canvas: Representation, therapeutic action and the creation of mind. The International Journal of Psychoanalysis 93:607–29.Google Scholar
Liberzon, I. & Sripada, C. S. (2008) The functional neuroanatomy of PTSD: A critical review. Progress in Brain Research 167:151–69.Google Scholar
Luborsky, L. (1984) Principles of psychoanalytic psychotherapy: A manual for supportive-expressive treatment. Basic Books.Google Scholar
Luborsky, L., Rosenthal, R., Diguer, L., Andrusyna, T., Berman, J. S., Levitt, J. T., Seligman, D. A. & Krause, E. D. (2002) The Dodo Bird Verdict is alive and well – mostly. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice 9(1):212.Google Scholar
Luborsky, L., Singer, B. & Luborsky, L. (1975) Comparative studies of psychotherapy. Archives of General Psychiatry 32:9951008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lupien, S. J., Friocco, A., Wan, N., Maheu, F., Lord, C., Schramek, T. & Tu, M. T. (2005) Stress hormones and human memory function across the lifespan. Psychoneuroendochrinology 30:225–42.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
MacLennan, N. (1996) Counseling for managers. Gower.Google Scholar
Maren, S. (1999) Long term potentiation in the amygdala: A mechanism for emotional learning and memory. Trends in Neuroscience 22:561–67.Google Scholar
Maren, S. (2011) Seeking a spotless mind: Extinction, deconsolidation, and erasure of fear memory. Neuron 70:830–45.Google Scholar
Markus, H. & Wurf, E. (1987) The dynamic self-concept: A social psychological perspective. Annual Review of Psychology 38:299337.Google Scholar
Martin, L. L. & Tesser, A. (1989) Toward a motivational and structural theory of ruminative thought. In: Unintended thought, ed. Uleman, J. S. & Bargh, J. A., pp. 306–26. Guilford.Google Scholar
McGaugh, J. L. (2000) Memory: A century of consolidation. Science 287:248–51.Google Scholar
McGaugh, J. L. (2003) Memory and emotion: The making of lasting memories. Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
McGaugh, J. L. & Roozendaal, B. (2002) Role of adrenal stress hormones in forming lasting memories in the brain. Current Opinions in Neurobiology 12:205–10.Google Scholar
McNally, R. J. (2005) Remembering trauma. Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
McNally, R. J., Bryant, R. A. & Ehlers, A. (2003) Does early psychological intervention promote recovery from posttraumatic stress? Psychological Science in the Public Interest 4(2):4579.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mednick, S. C., Cai, D. J., Kanady, J. & Drummond, S. P. A. (2008) Comparing the benefits of caffeine, naps and placebo on verbal, motor, and perceptual memory. Behavioural Brain Research 193:7986.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Meissner, W. W. (1998) Neutrality, abstinence, and the therapeutic alliance. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 46(4):1089–128.Google Scholar
Mikics, E., Baranyi, J. & Haller, J. (2008) Rats exposed to traumatic stress bury unfamiliar objects – a novel measure of hyper-vigilance in PTSD models? Physiology and Behavior 94:341–48.Google Scholar
Milad, M. R. & Quirk, G. J. (2002) Neurons in medial prefrontal cortex signal memory for fear extinction. Nature 420:70–4.Google Scholar
Missirlian, T. M., Toukmanian, S. G., Warwar, S. H. & Greenberg, L. S. (2005) Emotional arousal, client perceptual processing, and the working alliance in experiential psychotherapy for depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 73:861–71.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Modell, A. H. (2010) The unconscious as a knowledge processing center. In: Knowing, not-knowing and sort-of-knowing: psychoanalysis and the experience of uncertainty, ed. Petrucelli, J., pp. 4561. Karnac.Google Scholar
Monsen, J., Odland, T., Faugli, A., Daae, E. & Eilertsen, D. E. (1995) Personality disorders and psychosocial changes after intensive psychotherapy: A prospective follow-up study of an outpatient psychotherapy project, 5 years after end of treatment. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 36:256–68.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moscovitch, M. & Nadel, L. (1999) Multiple-trace theory and semantic dementia: Response to K. S. Graham (1999) Trends in Cognitive Sciences 3:87–9.Google Scholar
Moscovitch, M., Nadel, L., Winocur, G., Gilboa, A. & Rosenbaum, S. (2006) The cognitive neuroscience of remote episodic, semantic and spatial memory. Current Opinion in Neurobiology 16:179–90.Google Scholar
Murty, V. P., Ritchey, M., Adcock, R. A. & Labar, K. S. (2010) fMRI studies of successful emotional memory encoding: A quantitative meta-analysis. Neuropsychologia 48(12):3459–69.Google Scholar
Nadel, L., Campbell, J. & Ryan, L. (2007) Autobiographical memory retrieval and hippocampal activation as a function of repetition and the passage of time. Neural Plasticity 2007:90472. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2007/90472.Google Scholar
Nadel, L. & Jacobs, W. J. (1998) Traumatic memory is special. Current Directions in Psychological Science 7:154–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadel, L. & Moscovitch, M. (1997) Memory consolidation, retrograde amnesia and the hippocampal complex. Current Opinion in Neurobiology 7:217–27.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nadel, L., Samsonovich, A., Ryan, L. & Moscovitch, M. (2000) Multiple trace theory of human memory: Computational, neuroimaging, and neuropsychological results. Hippocampus 10(4):352–68.Google Scholar
Nader, K., Schafe, G. E. & Le Doux, J. E. (2000) Fear memories require protein synthesis in the amygdala for reconsolidation after retrieval. Nature 406:722–6.Google Scholar
Neisser, U. (1981) John Dean's memory: A case study. Cognition 9:122.Google Scholar
Neisser, U. & Harsch, N. (1992) Phantom flashbulbs: False recollections of hearing the news about Challenger. In: Affect and accuracy in recall: Studies of “flashbulb” memories, vol. 4, ed. Winograd, E. & Neisser, U., pp. 931. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Newman, K. M. (2013) A more usable Winnicott. Psychoanalytic Inquiry 33:5963.Google Scholar
Nolen-Hoeksema, S. (2004) The response styles theory. In: Depressive rumination, ed. Papageorgiou, C. & Wells, A., pp. 107–24. Wiley.Google Scholar
Orlinsky, D. E. & Howard, K. I. (1986) Process and outcome in psychotherapy. In: Handbook of psychotherapy and behavior change, ed. Garfield, S. & Bergin, A.. Wiley.Google Scholar
Ost, J., Vrij, A., Costall, A. & Bull, R. (2002) Crashing memories and reality monitoring: Distinguishing between perceptions, imaginations and “false memories.Applied Cognitive Psychology 16(2):125–34.Google Scholar
Otto, M. W., McHugh, K. & Kantak, K. M. (2010) Combined pharmacotherapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy for anxiety disorders: Medication effects, glucocorticoids, and attenuated treatment outcomes. Clinical Psychology Science and Practice 17:91103.Google Scholar
Paivio, S. C., Hall, I. E., Holowaty, K. A. M., Jellis, J. B. & Tran, N. (2001) Imaginal confrontation for resolving child abuse issues. Psychotherapy Research 11:433–53.Google Scholar
Paivio, S. C. & Laurent, C. (2001) Empathy and emotion regulation: Reprocessing memories of childhood abuse. Journal of Clinical Psychology 57(2):213–26.Google Scholar
Pascual-Leone, A. & Greenberg, L. S. (2007) Emotional processing in experiential therapy: Why “the only way out is through.” Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 75(6):875–87. Available at: http://doi.org/10.1037/0022-006X.75.6.875.Google Scholar
Payne, J. D., Jackson, E. D., Hoscheidt, S., Ryan, L., Jacobs, W. J. & Nadel, L. (2007) Stress administered prior to encoding impairs neutral but enhances emotional long-term episodic memories. Learning & Memory 14:861–8.Google Scholar
Payne, J. D., Jackson, E. D., Ryan, L., Hoscheidt, S., Jacobs, J. W. & Nadel, L. (2006) The impact of stress on neutral and emotional aspects of episodic memory. Memory 14:116.Google Scholar
Pezdek, K. (2003) Event memory and autobiographical memory for the events of September 11, 2001. Applied Cognitive Psychology 17:1033–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phelps, E. A. (2004) Human emotion and memory: Interactions of the amygdala and hippocampal complex. Current Opinion in Neurobiology 14(2):198202. Available at: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.conb.2004.03.015.Google Scholar
Pilero, S. (2004) Patients reflect upon their affect-focused, experiential psychotherapy: A retrospective study. Unpublished doctoral dissertation for Adelphi University.Google Scholar
Pitman, R. K., Sanders, K. M., Zusman, R. M., Healy, A. R., Cheema, F., Lasko, N. B., Cahill, L. & Orr, S. P. (2002) Pilot study of secondary prevention of posttraumatic stress disorder with propranolol. Biological Psychiatry 51:189–92.Google Scholar
Quirin, M. R. & Lane, R. D. (2012) The construction of emotional experience requires the integration of implicit and explicit emotional processes. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 35(3):159–60.Google Scholar
Rachman, A. W. (1997) Sandor Ferenczi: The psychotherapist of tenderness and passion. Jason Aronson.Google Scholar
Rachman, A. W. (2007) Sandor Ferenczi's contributions to the evolution of psychoanalysis. Psychoanalytic Psychology 24:7496.Google Scholar
Rachman, S. (1980) Emotional processing. Behaviour Research and Therapy 18:5160.Google Scholar
Ray, R., Ochsner, K., Cooper, J., Robertson, E., Gabrieli, J. & Gross, J. (2005) Individual differences in trait rumination and the neural systems supporting cognitive reappraisal. Cogitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience 5:156–68.Google Scholar
Reber, A. S. (1989) Implicit learning and tacit knowledge. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 118:219–35.Google Scholar
Reber, A. S. (1996) Implicit learning and tacit knowledge: An essay on the cognitive unconscious. Oxford Press.Google Scholar
Roozendaal, B., McEwen, B. S. & Chattarji, S. (2009) Stress, memory and the amygdala. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 10:423433.Google Scholar
Roozendaal, B., Okuda, S., Van der Zee, E. A. & McGaugh, J. L. (2006) Glucocorticoid enhancement of memory requires arousal-induced noradrenergic activation in the basolateral amygdala. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103:6741–46.Google Scholar
Rubin, D. C., Berntsen, D. & Johansen, M. K. (2008) A memory-based model of posttraumatic stress disorder: Evaluating basic assumptions underlying the PTSD diagnosis. Psychological Review 115:9851011.Google Scholar
Ryan, L., Cox, C., Hayes, S. M. & Nadel, L. (2008a) Hippocampal activation during episodic and semantic memory retrieval: Comparing category production and category cued recall. Neuropsychologia 46:2109–21.Google Scholar
Ryan, L., Hoscheidt, S. & Nadel, L. (2008b) Perspectives on episodic and semantic memory retrieval. In: Handbook of episodic memory (Handbook of behavioral neuroscience), ed. Dere, E., Easton, A., Huston, J. & Nadel, L., pp. 518. Elsevier.Google Scholar
Ryan, L., Lin, C. Y., Ketcham, K. & Nadel, L. (2010) The role of medial temporal lobe in retrieving spatial and nonspatial relations from episodic and semantic memory. Hippocampus 20:11–8.Google Scholar
Ryan, L., Nadel, L., Keil, K., Putnam, K., Schnyer, D., Trouard, T. & Moscovitch, M. (2001) Hippocampal complex and retrieval of recent and very remote autobiographical memories: Evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging in neurologically intact people. Hippocampus 11:707–14.Google Scholar
Schacter, D. L., Chiu, Y. P. & Ochsner, K. N. (1993) Implicit memory: A selective review. Annual Review of Neuroscience 16:159–82.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schacter, D. L. & Graf, P. (1989) Modality specificity of implicit memory for new associations. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 15:312.Google Scholar
Schacter, D. L. & Tulving, E. (1994) What are the memory systems of 1994? In: Memory systems 1994, ed. Schacter, D. L. & Tulving, E., pp. 138. MIT Press.Google Scholar
Schacter, D. L., Wagner, A. D. & Buckner, R. L. (2000) Memory Systems of 1999. In: The Oxford handbook of memory, ed. Tulving, E., Craik, F. I., pp. 627–43. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Schimek, J. G. (1975) A critical re-examination of Freud's concept of unconscious mental representation. International Review of Psycho-Analysis 2:171–87.Google Scholar
Schwabe, L., Nader, K., Wolf, O. T., Beaudry, T. & Pruessner, J. C. (2012) Neural signature of reconsolidation impairments by propranolol in humnans. Biological Psychiatry 71(4):380–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seger, C. A. & Miller, E. K. (2010) Category learning in the brain. Annual Review of Neuroscience 33:203–19.Google Scholar
Shedler, J. (2010) The efficacy of psycho dynamic therapy. American Psychologist 65(2):98109.Google Scholar
Silberschatz, G., Fretter, P. B. & Curtis, J. T. (1986) How do interpretations influence the process of psychotherapy? Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 54:646–52.Google Scholar
Soravia, L. M., Heinrichs, M., Aerni, A., Maroni, C., Schelling, G., Ehlert, U., Roozendaal, B. & de Quervain, D. J. (2006) Glucocorticoids reduce phobic fear in humans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103:5585–90.Google Scholar
Spezzano, C. (1993) Affect in psychoanalysis: A clinical synthesis. Analytic Press.Google Scholar
Squire, L. R. & Alvarez, P. (1995) Retrograde amnesia and memory consolidation: A neurobiological perspective. Current Opinions in Neurobiology 5:169–77.Google Scholar
Steklis, H. D. & Lane, R. (2013) The unique human capacity for emotional awareness: Psychological, neuroanatomical, comparative and evolutionary perspectives. In: Emotions of animals and humans, ed. Watanabe, S. & Kuczaj, S., pp. 165205. Springer.Google Scholar
Stern, D. B. (1983) Unformulated experience: From familiar chaos to creative disorder. Contemporary Psychoanalysis 19:7199.Google Scholar
Stern, D. N. (2004) The present moment in psychotherapy and everyday life. Norton.Google Scholar
Talarico, J., LaBar, K. S. & Rubin, D. C. (2004) Emotional intensity predicts autobiographical memory experience. Memory and Cognition 32:1118–32.Google Scholar
Talarico, J. M. & Rubin, D. C. (2003) Confidence, not consistency, characterizes flashbulb memories. Psychological Science 14(5):455–61.Google Scholar
Teasdale, J. D., Moore, R. G., Hayhurst, H., Pope, M., Williams, S. & Segal, S. V. (2002) Metacognitive awareness and prevention of relapse in depression: Empirical evidence. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 70(2):275–87.Google Scholar
Tenenbaum, E. M. & Reese, B. (2007) Memory-altering drugs: Shifting the paradigm of informed consent. American Journal of Bioethics 7:4042.Google Scholar
Thayer, J. F., Åhs, F., Fredriskon, M., Sollers, J. & Wager, T. D. (2012) A meta-analysis of heart rate variability and neuroimaging studies: Implications for heart rate variability as a marker of stress and health. Neuroscience and Behavioral Reviews 36(2):747–56.Google Scholar
Tribl, G. G., Wetter, T. C. & Schredl, M. (2013) Dreaming under antidepressants: A systematic review on evidence in depressive patients and healthy volunteers. Sleep Medicine Reviews 17(2):133–42.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (1983) Elements of episodic memory. Clarendon.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (2002) Episodic memory: From mind to brain. Annual Review of Psychology 53:125.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. (2005) Episodic memory and autonoesis: Uniquely human? In: The missing link in cognition: Origins of self-selective consciousness, ed. Terrace, H. S. & Metcalfe, J., pp. 356. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Tulving, E. & Markowitsch, H. J. (1998) Episodic and declarative memory: Role of the hippocampus. Hippocampus 8:198204.Google Scholar
Van der Kolk, B. A. (1995) The body, memory, and the psychobiology of trauma. In: Sexual abuse recalled: Treating trauma in the era of the recovered memory debate, ed. Alpert, J. L., pp. 2960. Aronson.Google Scholar
Van der KolK, B. A. & Van der Hart, O. (1989) Pierre Janet and the breakdown of adaptation in psychological trauma. American Journal of Psychiatry 146(12):1530–40.Google Scholar
Van Giezen, A. E., Arensman, E., Spinhoven, P. & Wolters, G. (2005) Consistency of memory for emotionally arousing events. Clinical Psychology Review 25:935–53.Google Scholar
Vijayraghavan, S., Wang, M., Birnbaum, S. G., Williams, G. V. & Arnsten, A. F. T. (2007) Inverted-U dopamine D1 receptor actions on prefrontal neurons engaged in working memory. Nature Neuroscience 10:376–84.Google Scholar
Vocks, S., Legenbauer, T., Wachter, A., Wucherer, M. & Kosfelder, J. (2007) What happens in the course of body exposure? Emotional, cognitive and physiological reactions to mirror confrontation in eating disorders. Journal of Psychosomatic Research 62:231–39.Google Scholar
Vyas, A., Mitra, R., Shankaranarayana Rao, B. S. & Chattarji, S. (2002) Chronic stress induces contrasting patterns of dendritic remodeling in hippocampal and amygdaloid neurons. The Journal of Neuroscience 22:6810–8.Google Scholar
Walker, M. P. (2009) The role of sleep in cognition and emotion. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1156:168–97.Google Scholar
Watkins, E. R. (2008) Constructive and unconstructive repetitive thought. Psychological Bulletin 134:163206.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Watson, J. P. & Marks, I. M. (1971) Relevant and irrelevant fear in flooding – a crossover study of phobic patients. Behavior Therapy 2:275293.Google Scholar
Welling, H. (2012) Transformative emotional sequence: Towards a common principle of change. Journal of Psychotherapy Integration 22(2):100–36.Google Scholar
Wilson, M. A. & McNaughton, B. L. (1994) Reactivation of hippocampal ensemble memories during sleep. Science 265:676–9.Google Scholar
Winkielman, P. & Berridge, K. (2004) Unconscious emotion. Current directions in Psychological Science 13(3):120–23.Google Scholar
Zajonc, R. B. (2000) Feeling and thinking: Closing the debate over the independence of affect. In: Feeling and thinking: The role of affect in social cognition, ed. Forgas, J. P., pp. 3158. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar