Title: Enhancing Intersubjectivity.
1Enhancing Intersubjectivity.
- Relation is reciprocity.
- Martin Buber.
Parent Infant Psychotherapy Talking to Babies. .
Bristol Annual Infancy Conference. 5th June 2009.
robin.balbernie_at_glos.nhs.uk
2- Infancy is a time of essential
intersubjectivity. a condition of any
psychological field formed by interacting worlds
of experience, at whatever developmental level
these worlds may be organised. (p. 3. Stolorow,
R. D. Atwood, G. E. (1992) Contexts of Being
The Intersubjective Foundations of Psychological
Life. Hillsdale, N.J. The Analytic Press.)
This is the experiential overlap
where mother and baby
produce a felt event to be
shared.
3- Attachment, in all mammals, is there to
keep the young in close proximity to the adult.
It prevents them being munched up or mislaid.
But
- Intersubjectivity is the constantly renewable
overlap where mother and baby each contribute to
a time and place of harmonious interpenetrating
mix up (Balint, The Basic Fault, p.66) when they
actively participate in and influence each
others immediate experiences.
4- Attachment behaviour is merely an indicator of
an intersubjective emergency. It has to be
triggered by an observed event and takes up a
tiny proportion of any childs life. - In contrast, intersubjective processes are
active within all interpersonal contacts,
whatever the level of affect or motivation.
5Mirror neurons.
- Mirror neurons are found in the premotor
cortex and the inferior parietal areas
associated with movement and perception as well
as in the posterior parietal lobe, the superior
temporal sulcus and the insula, regions that
correspond to our abilities to comprehend someone
elses feelings, understand intention and use
language. This is how we are designed to have
visceral reactions to each others actions,
mishaps and feelings making intersubjectivity an
innate aptitude.
6- Through mirror neurons we automatically imitate
or rehearse every action we witness. - Mirror neurons also fire at the sound of
something previously experienced. - When we listen to sentences describing actions
the same mirror neurons fires as would have if
the subject had done or witnessed the actions. - Mirror neurons play a key role in perceiving
intentions. Different ones fire depending on
expected action.
7- Daniel Stern describes intersubjective contact
as occurring when Two people see and feel
roughly the same mental landscape for a moment at
least. (Stern, 2004 The Present Moment. p.75) - He points out that this is a primary
motivational force quite separate from
attachment, but together they form a mutually
contributing system. Attachment keeps people
close so that
intersubjectivity can develop or
deepen, and intersubjectivity creates
conditions that are conducive to
forming attachments. (p.102)
8- The brain does not begin its day as a tabula
rasa. The brain is imbued at the start of life
with knowledge regarding how the organism should
be managed, namely how the life process should be
run and how a variety of events in the external
environment should be handled. (p. 205)
(Antonio Damasio, (2004) Looking For Spinoza. - London Vintage.)
9Inescapable intersubjectivity.
- Attachment is not just a matter of infant
safety, it sets up the conditions for
intersubjective contact between mother and
infant. What occurs within this has become a
crucial aspect of human development. This place
of closeness socialises the child, sculpting his
psyche and neurobiology. - The human brain is the only brain in the
biosphere whose potential cannot be realised on
its own. It needs to become part of a network
before its design features can be expressed.
(p.324)
Donald, M. (2001) A Mind So Rare.
10- Trevarthen summarizes how It is becoming
increasingly clear that the human central nervous
system, with the human body, is designed for an
exceptionally elaborate brain-to-brain linking so
the motive regulations of one brain can
powerfully interact with those of the brain in
another person. - Trevarthen, C. (2001) Intrinsic motives for
companionship in understanding Their origin,
development, and significance for infant mental
health. IMHJ, Vol. 22 (1-2), 95-131.
11- Human infants have profoundly undeveloped
brain. Maintaining proximity to their caregivers
is essential both for survival and for allowing
their brains to use the mature states of the
attachment figure to help them organize their own
mental functioning. (p.149) Daniel Siegal, The
Developing Mind.
12- In humans intersubjective awareness motivates
cultural learning the intergenerational
transmission of knowledge and skills with all the
conceptual and material consequences. - Trevarthen, C. Aitken, K.J. (2001) Infant
intersubjectivity research, theory, and clinical
application. Journal of Child Psychology
Psychiatry. Vol. 42 (1)
13- And as a part of this, Stern suggests that
intersubjectivity contributed to species survival
as it promotes group formation, it enhances
group functioning, and it assures group cohesion
by giving rise to morality. (The Present Moment,
p.98)
14- The target of therapy is the intersubjective
field between infant and parent emphasising how
early intervention is set within the shared space
of the attachment and caregiving systems, and
does not favour one at the expense of the other.
15The intersubjective field.
Reflective function. Containment. Holding.
Representation of infants mental
state. Reflected back to infant.
Inference.
Core of psychological self.
Internalisation.
Inaccurate mirroring (or non-contingent
responses) leaves the baby with unlabelled
feelings, which will be harder to regulate.
16If all goes well
- The securely attached child perceives in the
caregivers reflective stance an image of himself
as desiring and believing. He sees that the
caregiver represents him as an intentional being,
and this representation is internalised to form
the self. If the caregivers reflective capacity
has enabled her accurately to picture the childs
intentional stance, then the child will have the
opportunity to find himself in the other as a
mentalizing individual. At the core of our selves
is the representation of how we were seen.
(p.348) Fonagy, Gergely, Jurist Target. (2002)
Affect Regulation, Mentalization, and the
Development of the Self.
17- A caretaker with a predisposition to see
relationships in terms of mental content permits
the normal growth of the infants mental
function. His or her mental state anticipated
and acted on, the infant will be secure in
attachment. Fonagy, Steele, Steele,
Moran, Higgitt, (1991) The capacity for
understanding mental states The reflective self
in parent and child and its significance for
security of attachment. Infant Mental Health
Journal, 12, (3)
18Reflective function and quality of attachment.
- Secure attachment and reflective function are
overlapping constructs, and the vulnerability
associated with insecure attachment lies
primarily in the childs diffidence
in conceiving of the world in
terms of psychic rather than
physical reality. - (p.351) Fonagy, Gergely, Jurist Target.
(2002) Affect
Regulation, Mentalization, and the
Development of the
Self.
19- Attunement requires an awareness of the infant
as a psychological entity with mental experience.
It presumes a capacity on the part of the
caregiver to reflect on the infants mental
experience and re-present it to the infant
translated into the language of actions the
infant can understand.
(p.207) - Fonagy, P., Steele, H., Steele, M., Moran,
G. S.
Higgitt, A. C. (1991) The capacity
for
understanding mental states The reflective
self in
parent and child and its significance for
security of
attachment. - Infant Mental Health Journal.
Vol. 12. (3) pp 201-218.
20- Thomas Ogden writes Holding is concerned
with being and its relation to time the
container-contained is centrally concerned with
the processing (dreaming) of thoughts derived
from lived emotional experiences.
(2004) On holding and containment, being and
dreaming. Int. J. of Psychoanalysis. 85.
21- Bion described containment as a function of
maternal reverie, seen as that state of mind
which is open to the reception of any objects
from the loved object and is therefore capable of
reception of the infants projective
identifications whether they are felt by the
infant to be good or bad. (p.36) Learning From
Experience.
22- Britton gives a later, more hands-on,
description of containment.
The mother, if she is
receptive to the infants state of mind and
capable of allowing it to be evoked in herself,
can process it in such a way that in an
identifiable form she can attend to it in the
infant. In this way something which in the
infant is near-sensory and somatic is transformed
by the mother into something more mental which
can be used for thought or stored as memory.
(p.22) - Britton, R. (1998) Belief and Imagination.
23- Emde (198938) remind us that the infant
comes to the world with a biological preparedness
for participating in social interactionsThe
infant has built-in capacities for initiating,
maintaining, and terminating social interactions
with others. (p. 38) The Infants Relationship
Experience Developmental and Affective Aspects.
In Relationship Disturbances in Early Childhood.
Ed. Sameroff Emde.
24- Fonagy puts this in attachment terms.
Secure attachment may thus have a great deal in
common with successful containment. What is
critical is the mothers capacity mentally to
contain the baby and respond, in terms of
physical care, in a manner that shows awareness
of the childs mental state yet reflect coping
(mirroring distress while communicating an
incompatible affect). - (p.166)
- Fonagy, P. (2001) Attachment Theory
and Psychoanalysis.
25- Donald Winnicott described the mothers
capacity to put herself in the babys place and
know what the baby needs in the general
management of the body, and therefore of the
person. He called this early maternal provision
the holding phase, - when with the dawn of
intelligence and the beginning of a mind as
something distinct from the psyche the infant
changes from a relationship with a subjectively
conceived object to a relationship with an object
objectively perceived.
He defined holding as the total
environmental provision prior to
the concept of living with.
26- Secondary intersubjectivity arises when the
infant can systematically combine interests in
immediate physical reality with communication
about their knowledge and intentions. A
deliberate sought sharing of experiences about
events and things is achieved for the first
time. - Trevarthen, Hubley, (1978) Secondary
intersubjectivity confidence, confiding and acts
of meaning in the first year. In Lock, A. (Ed.)
Action, Gesture and Symbol The Emergence of
Language.
27Secondary intersubjectivity.
- The sign of secondary intersubjectivity is
when something can become a shared focus between
infant and another. This new development is
heralded by the systematically combining of
interests of the infant in the physical,
privately-known reality near him, and his acts of
communication addressed to persons. (p.184) - Trevarthen, C. Hubley, P. (1978) Secondary
intersubjectivity confidence, confiding and acts
of meaning in the first year. pp 183-229 in
Lock, A. (Ed.) Action, Gesture and Symbol The
Emergence of Language.
28Bonjour!
Ca va?