| |
| | Trauma Information Pages, Articles: Allan Schore (2001a) |
 | | The brain is thus considered to be a bioenvironmental or biosocial organ (Gibson, 1996), and investigators are now exploring the unique domains of the "social brain" (Brothers, 1990), and the central role of emotions in social communication (Adolphs, 2000). |
 | | Furthermore, since the maturation of the brain systems that mediate this coping capacity occurs in human infancy, the development of the ability to adaptively cope with stress is directly and significantly influenced by the infant’s early interaction with the primary caregiver (Schore, 1994, 1997b; 2000b). |
 | | Although the symbiotic infant is dimly aware that the mother is the source of his pleasurable experiences, he is in a "state of undifferentiation, a state of fusion with the mother, in which the ‘I’ is not differentiated from the ‘not-I’" (p. |
| www.trauma-pages.com /schore-2001a.htm (18017 words) |
|