INTRODUCTION; 1: PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS 1: NARRATIVES, INTERPERSONAL SCHEMAS AND MENTAL STATES; 2: PERSONALITY DISORDER PSYCHOPATHOLOGY 2: METACOGNITION, COPING AND EMOTIONAL REGULATION. MAINTENANCE MODEL; 3: USE OF IMAGERY AND BODILY TECHNIQUES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY; 4: THE DECISION-MAKING PROCEDURE AND EXPERIENTIAL TECHNIQUES; 5: GUIDED IMAGERY AND IMAGERY RESCRIPTING; 6: DRAMA TECHNIQUES: TWO CHAIRS, ROLE-PLAY AND ENACTMENT; 7: BODY INTERVENTIONS; 8: BEHAVIOURAL EXPLORATION AND ACTIVATION; 9: TECHNIQUES FOR RESTRUCTURING ATTENTION AND TREATING COGNITIVE COPING STRATEGIES; 10: METACOGNITIVE INTERPERSONAL THERAPY IN GROUP (MIT-G); 11: TECHNIQUE SEQUENCES; REFERENCES
Giancarlo Dimaggio, psychiatrist and psychotherapist, has published six books on psychotherapy for severe patients and around 200 scientific articles and book chapters. He is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Clinical Psychology: In-Session.
Paolo Ottavi, psychologist and psychotherapist, is the main developer of two published treatments with empirical support: Metacognition Oriented Social Skills Training and Metacognitive-Interpersonal Based Mindfulness Training.
Raffaele Popolo, psychiatrist and psychotherapist, has published many scientific papers and developed Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy in Group which has already been tested in two randomised control trials and two pilot studies. It is currently applied in Norway, Spain and Australia.
Giampaolo Salvatore, psychiatrist and psychotherapist has published many scientific papers and has adapted Metacognitive Intepersonal Therapy for psychosis and for borderline personality disorders.
The field of psychotherapy is moving beyond old polarities. In this
new volume on Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy (MIT), Dimaggio
and colleagues enter the central stage of this process. As readers
we are introduced to the forefront of contemporary theoretical and
technical debates. Deeply respectful and ethically grounded in
style, while at the same time playful, challenging and conveying an
intellectual joy of exploring new terrains. A delightful and highly
stimulating read. Sigmund Karterud, MD, PhD. Professor of
psychiatry, Oslo University Hospital. Metacognitive Interpersonal
Therapy represents a significant addition to our world literature
on psychotherapy and its application to complex conditions
including persons with histories of trauma, maladaptive personality
traits, anxiety, dissociation and eating disorders. While falling
generally within the field of cognitive psychotherapies it moves
beyond the dualistic views which separate mind and body which
plague this approach. It understands human suffering cannot be
reduced to discrete thoughts or failures to form singular adaptive
ideas and advances our field by focusing on the inextricably
entwined embodied and reflective experiences which lay at the core
of mental health.Paul H Lysaker, Clinical Psychologist Roudebush VA
Medical Center, Professor Clinical Psychology, Department of
Psychiatry
The field of psychotherapy is moving beyond old polarities. In this
new volume on Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy (MIT), Dimaggio
and colleagues enter the central stage of this process. As readers
we are introduced to the forefront of contemporary theoretical and
technical debates. Deeply respectful and ethically grounded in
style, while at the same time playful, challenging and conveying an
intellectual joy of exploring new terrains. A delightful and highly
stimulating read. Sigmund Karterud, MD, PhD. Professor of
psychiatry, Oslo University Hospital. Metacognitive Interpersonal
Therapy represents a significant addition to our world literature
on psychotherapy and its application to complex conditions
including persons with histories of trauma, maladaptive personality
traits, anxiety, dissociation and eating disorders. While falling
generally within the field of cognitive psychotherapies, it moves
beyond the dualistic views which separate mind and body which
plague this approach. It understands that human suffering cannot be
reduced to discrete thoughts or failures to form singular adaptive
ideas and advances our field by focusing on the inextricably
entwined embodied and reflective experiences which lay at the core
of mental health.Paul H Lysaker, Clinical Psychologist Roudebush VA
Medical Center, Professor Clinical Psychology, Department of
Psychiatry
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