Curriculum Vitae
Presentations by Year
2001 Presentations
KPCC FM, National Public Radio
Radio Interview on “Airtalk,” Larry Mantle, Host.
Pasadena, CA
January 2001
Caring Foundation and Safe Start Conference
Co-presenter with Joy Osofsky, Ph.D. Plenary address: “The development of a predisposition to violence: The critical roles of attachment disorders and the maturation of the right brain.”
New Orleans, LA
January 2001
Louisiana State University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry
Grand Rounds Presentation: “Recent findings on the development of the emotional brain – an interface of infant psychiatry, neuropsychiatry, and clinical psychiatry.”
New Orleans, LA
January 2001
Tulane University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry
Child Psychiatry Grand Rounds Presentation: “Early relational trauma and the development of the right brain.”
New Orleans, LA
January 2001
Conference: Psychodynamics of Early Life: The Role of Infant and Mother Interaction, UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute
Co-presenter with Colwyn Trevarthen, Ph.D. and James Grotstein, M.D. Address: “The neurobiology of infant-mother emotional communications.”
Los Angeles, CA
February 2001
The Cutting Edge Conference, Healing Trauma: Attachment, Trauma, the Brain, and the Mind. Co-Sponsored by University of California San Diego School of Medicine and Lifespan Learning Institute
Co-presenter with Bessel van der Kolk, M.D., Mary Main, Ph.D., Francine Shapiro, Ph.D., and Daniel Siegel, M.D. Presentation: “Effect of early childhood trauma on affect regulation: The development of a predisposition to violence.”
San Diego, CA
March 2001
Joint Annual Conference, Australian Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health and The Australasian Society for Traumatic Stress Studies
Preconference all-day workshop: “Psychological trauma – treatment and recovery.”Keynote addresses: “Early relational trauma and the development of the right brain” “Regulation of the right brain – a primary mechanism of attachment development and psychotherapy.” Panels: “Impediments to recovery from traumatic exposure” and “Evidence based treatment for PTSD: Is it relevant for clinical practice?”
Canberra, Australia
March 2001
Auckland Family Counselling and Psychotherapy Centre and the Department of Psychotherapy and Applied Psychology, Auckland University of Technology
Workshop: “Early relational trauma and the development of the right brain.” “Clinical implications of a psychoneurobiological model of projective identification.”
Auckland, New Zealand
April 2001
The Department of Psychotherapy and Applied Psychology, Auckland University of Technology and the Auckland Family Counselling and Psychotherapy Centre, University of Auckland Medical School
Lecture: “Attachment and the development of the emotional brain – an interface of neurobiology, neuropsychiatry, and attachment theory.”
Auckland, New Zealand
April 2001
Department of Psychology, University of Auckland
Departmental Lecture: “Early relational trauma and the development of the right brain.”
Auckland, New Zealand
April 2001
Departmental Lecture: “Early relational trauma and the development of the right brain.”
Luncheon address: “Early brain development and sense of self.”
Portland, OR
April 2001
Caremark Behavioral Health Lecture, Legacy Emanuel Hospital & Health Center
All day workshop: “Affect regulation: A fundamental process of psychobiological development, brain organization, and psychotherapy.”
Portland, OR
April 2001
Oregon Health Sciences University
Child Psychiatry Grand Rounds, “Early relational trauma and the development of the right brain.”
Portland, OR
April 2001
University of Oregon
Interdisciplinary study group: Development, Self-Organization Theory, and Neuroscience (Co-participant with Don Tucker, Ph.D., Alan Fogel, Ph.D., Mary Rothbart, Ph.D., and Marc Lewis, Ph.D.).
Eugene, OR
April 2001
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon
Invited addresses "The impact of early relational trauma on right brain development” and “Recent findings on the development of the emotional brain.”
Eugene, OR
April 2001
Hakomi Integrative Somatics
All-day workshop: “Attachment, trauma, and affect regulation: Recent advances in theory and clinical practice.”
Boulder, CO
June 2001
2001 Inaugural Symposium for New Research on Culture-Brain Interactions, Foundation for Psycho-Cultural Research
Three-day workshop: Focus on the creation of a center for interdisciplinary study of Culture, the Brain and Development at University of California at Los Angeles, Departments of Neuroscience, Psychology, Psychiatry, Anthropology, and Public Health.
Ojai, CA
June 2001
Anna Freud Centre
Seminar: “Contributions from the decade of the brain to infant mental health.”
London, England
July 2001
Centre for Child Mental Health Lecture Series, Institute for Arts in Therapy
Lecture: “The neurobiology of parent infant interaction and its implications for future mental health”
Islington, England
July 2001
University College of London Attachment Research Unit and the Clinic for the Study and Treatment of Dissociative Disorders Conference, “Attachment, Trauma, and Dissociation: Developmental, Neuropsychological, Clinical, and Forensic Considerations”
Invited presentations: “Regulation of the right brain: A fundamental mechanism of attachment, trauma, dissociation, and psychotherapy, Parts 1 & 2.”
London, England
July 2001
United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy 7th Professional Conference, “Psychotherapy and Neuroscience: Revolutionary Connections”
Public lecture. “Neuroscience: why should therapists be interested? An interview with Allan Schore –“the American Bowlby.”
London, England
July 2001
http:www.psychotherapy.org.uk/schore_interview.htmInternational Psychoanalytic Association Annual Meeting
Member on the panel on the Application of Chaos Theory to Psychoanalysis Paper: “Implications of dyanmic systems theory for psychoanalytic models of emotion and development.” Read by David Scharff, M.D.
Nice, France
July 2001
Santa Barbara Graduate Institute
Two day workshop: “Developmental psychoneurobiology: Attachment and the development of the emotional brain.”
Santa Barbara, CA
July 2001
Inaugural Symposium for New Research on Culture-Brain Interactions, Fourth Annual Children-Our Common Wealth Conference
Keynote address, “Parent-infant communication and the neurobiology of emotional development.” Plenary session, “The effects of early relational trauma on right brain development, affect regulation, and infant mental health.”
Covington, KY
September 2001
Advanced Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Association, St. Louis Psychoanalytic Institute
One day workshop, “Attachment, the brain, and psychotherapy: From mother’s gaze to therapist’s office.”
St. Louis, MO
October 2001
Kansas City Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis
Two day workshop on Affect Regulation. Lectures: “Parent-infant communications and the neurobiology of emotional development,” ‘Regulation of the right brain: a fundamental mechanism of psychotherapy,’ and “Clinical implications of a psychoneurobiological model of projective identification.”
Kansas City, MO
October 2001
Kentucky Psychological Association, Annual Convention
Clinical workshop: “Affect regulation: A fundamental process of psychobiological development, brain organization, and psychotherapy.”
Louisville, KY
November 2001
Arkansas Psychological Association, Annual Convention
All day workshop: “Affect regulation: A fundamental process of psychobiological development, brain organization, and psychotherapy.”
Little Rock, AR
November 2001
Early Childhood Center, Infant Mental Health Specialist Training Program Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Seminar: “Summary of the Excitatory & Inhibitory Circuitry of the Developing Right Hemisphere:Clinical Implications.”
Los Angeles, CA
November 2001
Association for Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health Congress, Annual Meeting
Pre-Congress all-day workshop. “Psychobiological regulation: An essential developmental process.” Panel: “The genesis of personality,” co-presenter with Thomas Verney, MD. Invited presentation, “The neurobiology of attachment and the origin of the personality.”
San Francisco, CA
December 2001