Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Dec 2010

Following Neal Miller's Footprints: Integrating Biofeedback With the Psychodynamic, Relational, and Intersubjective Approach

PhD and
MD, MA
Page Range: 131 – 135
DOI: 10.5298/1081-5937-38.4.02
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Abstract

This article provides a brief review of Neal Miller's translation of psychoanalytic theoretical concepts into operational behavioral research and explores relevant interactions of clinical biofeedback and psychoanalytic practice, both now and in Miller's time. Presently, psychoanalytic psychotherapists are more concerned with both the analyst's and the analysand's contribution to the intersubjective field of the therapeutic endeavor than with modifying biologically based, instinctual urges, as they were in Miller's time. Current psychoanalytic theory translates directly into the biofeedback therapeutic situation via the exploration of interpersonal relationship dynamics, or the intersubjective field, which includes the patient, therapist, and biofeedback instrumentation. All figure significantly in the patient's acquisition of a biofeedback task.

Copyright: Association for Applied Psychophysiology & Biofeedback


Contributor Notes

Correspondence: Arnon Rolnick, PhD, Psychotherapy Program, School of Medicine, Ben Gurion University, Ramat Gan 52299 Israel, email: rolnick@gmail.com.
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