Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science

Journal of Behavioral and Brain Science

ISSN Print: 2160-5866
ISSN Online: 2160-5874
www.scirp.org/journal/jbbs
E-mail: jbbs@scirp.org
"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] O sentido do trabalho para o profissional de TI: uma abordagem experiencial
2020
[2] O uso da Focalização na Orientação Profissional: uma proposta experiencial
2018
[3] How does psychotherapy work? A case study in multi-level explanation.
2015
[4] Changing maladaptive memories through reconsolidation: a role for sleep in psychotherapy
2015
[5] 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
[6] Stopping the Nightmare: An Analysis of Focusing Oriented Dream Imagery Therapy For Trauma Survivors with Repetitive Nightmares
2015
[7] The importance of the rites of passage in assigning semantic structures to autobiographical memory
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[8] The integrated memory model: A new framework for understanding the mechanisms of change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[9] Psychopathology arises from intertemporal bargaining as well as from emotional trauma
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[10] Memory reconsolidation, repeating, and working through: Science and culture in psychotherapeutic research and practice
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[11] Multiple traces or Fuzzy Traces? Converging evidence for applications of modern cognitive theory to psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[12] Clinical applications of counterfactual thinking during memory reactivation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[13] The relevance of maintaining and worsening processes in psychopathology
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[14] Mental model construction, not just memory, is a central component of cognitive change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[15] Deconstructing the process of change in cognitive behavioral therapy: An alternative approach focusing on the episodic retrieval mode
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[16] How does psychotherapy work? A case study in multilevel explanation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[17] Memory reconsolidation and self-reorganization
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[18] Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: New insights from brain science
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[19] Social-psychological evidence for the effective updating of implicit attitudes
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[20] Minding the findings: Let's not miss the message of memory reconsolidation research for psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[21] The nature of the semantic/episodic memory distinction: A missing piece of the" working through" process
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[22] Reconsolidation: Turning consciousness into memory
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[23] Reconsolidation versus retrieval competition: Rival hypotheses to explain memory change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[24] Emotion regulation as a main mechanism of change in psychotherapy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[25] Memory reconsolidation and psychotherapeutic process
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[26] Top-down versus bottom-up perspectives on clinically significant memory reconsolidation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[27] Memory reconsolidation keeps track of emotional changes, but what will explain the actual" processing"?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[28] Reconsolidation or re-association?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[29] How do we remember traumatic events? Exploring the role of neuromodulation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[30] 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
[31] Therapeutic affect reduction, emotion regulation, and emotional memory reconsolidation: A neuroscientific quandary
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[32] Trade-offs between the accuracy and integrity of autobiographical narrative in memory reconsolidation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[33] Changing maladaptive memories through reconsolidation: A role for sleep in psychotherapy?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[34] A Clinician's Perspective on Memory Reconsolidation as the Primary Basis for Psychotherapeutic Change in PTSD
The Behavioral and brain sciences, 2015
[35] Disruption of reconsolidation processes is a balancing act-can it really account for change in psychotherapy?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[36] Focus on emotion as a catalyst of memory updating during reconsolidation
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[37] Levels of analysis in neuroscientific studies of emotion: Comment on “The quartet theory of human emotions: an integrative and neurofunctional model” by S. …
2015
[38] Social-psychological evidence for the effective updating of implicit attitudes 1
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[39] A clinician's perspective on memory reconsolidation as the primary basis for psychotherapeutic change in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[40] Memory reconsolidation keeps track of emotional changes, but what will explain the actual “processing”?
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2015
[41] Levels of analysis in neuroscientific studies of emotion: Comment on “The quartet theory of human emotions: an integrative and neurofunctional model” by …
2015
[42] The nature of the semantic/episodic memory distinction: A missing piece of the “working through” process
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] 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
[45] 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
[46] Now you see it, now you don't: on emotion, context, and the algorithmic prediction of human imageability judgments
Frontiers in psychology, 2013
[47] Aesthetic engagement during moments of suffering
Scientific Study of Literature, 2013
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