Childhood trauma has the potential to overwhelm the coping ability of children and can create developmental changes in brain structure and function. These changes to the developing mind allow for short term survival and sacrifice long term effective functioning. Adolescence is a time when these changes have the potential for both becoming more deeply embedded or largely rectified as the person moves toward adulthood.
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ISSTD is pleased to offer a robust gathering of trainings featuring our very own Living Legends.
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Learn from a variety of seasoned experts and leading-edge researchers about the neuroscience and theory that supports the diagnosis, conceptualization and treatment of persons with dissociative dis
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Abstract Mary Main and Judith Solomon (1986) were first to identify fear as an important factor in the face of the child's attachment needs.
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Abstract Mary Main and Judith Solomon (1986) were first to identify fear as an important factor in the face of the child's attachment needs.
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AbstractClients reporting incestuous abuse that continues into adulthood represent a relatively small sample of child sexual abuse survivors, but one that is rarely re
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ISSTD is pleased to start off 2023 with a robust offering of trainings from many of our own past Presidents.
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Abstract: This presentation will describe some of the key insights that I have gleaned over the last 35 years of treating child and adolescent dissociative disorders.
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AbstractWhat is the nature of psychotic symptoms, and what relevance do they have to dissociation and dissociative disorders?
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Abstract: Hypnosis was the first Western form of psychotherapy, yet it remains underutilized in part because of insufficient understanding of its neural basis.
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