Object Relations Theory Flashcards

1
Q

ORT differ from Freud in 3 ways:

A
  • emphasis on interpersonal relationships
  • stresses mother-infant relationship rather than father
  • people are motivated primarily for human contact rather than for sexual pleasure
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2
Q

Father of object relations

A

Freud

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3
Q

Psychic representations of unconscious id instincts; unconscious images of good and bad

A

Phantasies

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4
Q

Infants introject and having a life of their own within the child’s fantasy world

A

Objects

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5
Q

Way of dealing with both internal and external objects; represent normal social growth and development

A

Positions

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6
Q

Keep good and bad breast separate; fear persecutory breast and keep ideal breast in protection again persecutors

A

Paranoid-schizoid position

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7
Q

When external objects viewed as a whole and that good and bad can exist in the same person; feel anxiety over losing loved object and guilt for wanting to destroy

A

Depressive position

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8
Q

Resolved when infants fantasize that they have made up for their previous transgressions against their mother and realize that their mother will not abandom them

A

Depressive position

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9
Q

Protect ego against anxiety aroused by their own destructive fantasies

A

Psychic defense mechanisms

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10
Q

Fantasy of taking into one’s own body the images that one has of an external object such as the mother’s breast

A

Introjection

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11
Q

Infants introject good objects to protect against anxiety and also bad objects to gain control of them

A

Introjection

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12
Q

The fantasy that one’s own feelings and impulses actually reside in another person; alleviate unbearable anxiety

A

Projection

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13
Q

Keeping apart incompatible impulses; bad me and good me; enable ppl to see both positive and negative aspects of themselves

A

Splitting

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14
Q

Infants split off unacceptable parts of themselves, project into another object and finally introject them in an altered form.

A

Projective identification

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15
Q

Person introjects external objects and organize them into a psychologically meaningful framework

A

Internalizations

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16
Q

Unorganized at birth but strong enough to feel anxiety , use defense mechanisms, form early object relations in both phantasy and reality; reaches maturity earlier than freud

A

Ego

17
Q

Emerges much earlier than Freud and much harsher and cruel; grows along oedipus complex and emerges as a realistic guilt after resolved

A

Superego

18
Q

Klein oedipus complex stems from:

A

Children’s fear that their parents will seek revenge against them for their fantasy of emptying the parents body

19
Q

Develop positive relationship with father (or both) and fantasizes that father will fill her with babies

A

Feminine position

20
Q

Primarily concerned with the psychological birth of the individual

A

Mahler’s view

21
Q

Child becomes an individual separate from his or her primary caregiver which leads to a sense of identity

A

Psychological birth

22
Q

Stage of psych birth: satisfy needs within the all-powerful protective orbit of their mother’s care; objectless stage

A

Normal autism

23
Q

Stage of psych birth: infants behave as if they and their mother were an omnipotent, symbiotic unit

A

Normal symbiosis

24
Q

Stage of psych birth: becoming psychologically separated from their mothers and achieving individuation

A

Separation-individuation

25
Q

Bodily breaking away from mother-infantic symbiotic relationship

A

Differentiation

26
Q

Desire to bring mother and themselves back together both physically and psychologically

A

Rapprochement

27
Q

Must develop a constant inner representation of their mother so that they can tolerate being physically away from her

A

Libidinal object constancy

28
Q

Kohut

Evolves from a vague and undifferentiated image to a clear and precise sense of individual identity

A

Self

29
Q

Kohut

The core of human personality

A

Human relatedness

30
Q

Kohut

Referred to as selfobjects by infants

A

Adults

31
Q

Kohut

2 basic narcissistic needs

A

Grandiose exhibitionistic self and idealized parent image

32
Q

Kohut
Established when infant relates to a mirroring self object who reflects approval of behavior; “if others see me as perfect, i an perfect”

A

Grandiose exhibitionistic self

33
Q

Kohut

Someone else is perfect; “you are perfect, i am a part of u”

A

Idealized parent image

34
Q

Children who experience a healthy relationship with mom develop an integrated ego, a punitive superego, a stable self-concept, and satisfying interpersonal relations

A

Otto kernberg’s view

35
Q

Attachments formed during childhood have an important impact on adulthood

A

Bowlby’s attachment theory

36
Q

3 stages of sepanx

A
  • protest
  • apathy and despair
  • detachment(only one unique to humans)
37
Q

a technique for measuring the type of attachment style that exists between caregiver and infant

A

Strange situation

38
Q

Goal of kleinian therapy

A
  • Reduce depressive anxieties and persecutory fears and lessen harshness of internalized objects
  • reexperience early emotions and point out differnces between reality and fantasy