释义 |
Definition of psychodynamics in English: psychodynamicsplural noun ˌsʌɪkəʊdʌɪˈnamɪksˌsaɪkoʊdaɪˈnæmɪks 1treated as singular The interrelation of the unconscious and conscious mental and emotional forces that determine personality and motivation. the psychodynamics of adolescent suicide Example sentencesExamples - Ghassan Hage's book does not engage directly with the established Australian debates about multiculturalism and immigration, but subjects them to a systematic Lacanian analysis which foregrounds their unconscious psychodynamics.
- Alternatively, possession has been seen in terms of the psychodynamics of intrapsychic tensions and multiple personality disorders, as well as the physiology and epidemiology of trance states.
- They represent that implicit knowledge of cultural psychodynamics that exists for communities in the vernacular imagination of communal discourse - in the telling of stories out of the common repertoire of local narrative tradition.
- Future studies should put emphasis in the psychodynamics of psi and in the emotional conflictivity, which, in greater or lesser degree, this seems to generate.
- Cochran's art is a strange if accurate way to keep a diary, a visual recording that gives form to the psychodynamics of mind and memory, evoking a spectrum of emotional responses.
- 1.1 The branch of psychology that deals with psychodynamics.
Example sentencesExamples - The intent of this article is to highlight the crucial role of psychotherapy supervision in the learning of psychodynamics and to emphasize that such knowledge is fundamental for psychiatrists.
- Cognitive and evolutionary psychologists may find in psychodynamics careful descriptions of traits that may closely match the functional subunits of the mind that they are seeking.
- I began my training in a fiercely eclectic psychiatric residency program about 30 years ago, wherein both psychodynamics and research-based biological psychiatry were taken very seriously.
Definition of psychodynamics in US English: psychodynamicsplural nounˌsīkōdīˈnamiksˌsaɪkoʊdaɪˈnæmɪks 1treated as singular The interrelation of the unconscious and conscious mental and emotional forces that determine personality and motivation. the psychodynamics of adolescent suicide Example sentencesExamples - Cochran's art is a strange if accurate way to keep a diary, a visual recording that gives form to the psychodynamics of mind and memory, evoking a spectrum of emotional responses.
- Ghassan Hage's book does not engage directly with the established Australian debates about multiculturalism and immigration, but subjects them to a systematic Lacanian analysis which foregrounds their unconscious psychodynamics.
- Alternatively, possession has been seen in terms of the psychodynamics of intrapsychic tensions and multiple personality disorders, as well as the physiology and epidemiology of trance states.
- Future studies should put emphasis in the psychodynamics of psi and in the emotional conflictivity, which, in greater or lesser degree, this seems to generate.
- They represent that implicit knowledge of cultural psychodynamics that exists for communities in the vernacular imagination of communal discourse - in the telling of stories out of the common repertoire of local narrative tradition.
- 1.1 The branch of psychology that deals with psychodynamics.
Example sentencesExamples - The intent of this article is to highlight the crucial role of psychotherapy supervision in the learning of psychodynamics and to emphasize that such knowledge is fundamental for psychiatrists.
- Cognitive and evolutionary psychologists may find in psychodynamics careful descriptions of traits that may closely match the functional subunits of the mind that they are seeking.
- I began my training in a fiercely eclectic psychiatric residency program about 30 years ago, wherein both psychodynamics and research-based biological psychiatry were taken very seriously.
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