Psychological repression - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Psychological repression , or simply repression , according to Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory, is the involuntary psychological act of excluding desires and impulses (wishes, fantasies or fe...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_repression
Repression - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Repression may refer to: • Memory inhibition, the ability to filter irrelevant memories from attempts to recall • Political repression, the oppression or persecution of an individual or group for pol...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repression
Dr. Michael Fenichel defines repression in 21st Century terms. ... I have noticed that more than one visitor to my web site has searched for something on "repression" and gone away empty-handed. Despite links to psychoanalysis, personality theories, anxiety pages, and discourse on the ego, the term is not easy to find.
www.fenichel.com/repression.shtml www.fenichel.com/repression.shtml
Repression - Definition of Repression at Dictionary.com a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms, and translation of Repression. Look it up now! ... Use repression in a Sentence...
dictionary.reference.com/browse/repression dictionary.reference.com/browse/repression
Repression, which Anna Freud also called "motivated forgetting," is just that: not being able to recall a threatening situation, person, or event. This, too, is dangerous, and is a part of most other defenses.
www.ship.edu/~cgboeree/freud.html
Many psychologists believe that unconscious repression of traumatic experiences such as sexual abuse or rape is a defense mechanism which backfires. The unpleasant experience is forgotten but not forgiven.
www.skepdic.com/repressedmemory.html www.skepdic.com/repressedmemory.html
The homeodomain-containing protein Nkx2. ... Despite their sequence divergence, both sites were involved in the Nkx2.2-mediated repression of the myelin basic protein promoter. Binding of Nkx2.2 also blocked and disrupted the binding of the transcriptional activator Puralpha to the myelin basic protein promoter.
www.medscape.com/medline/abstract/15695521
The Medscape Journal ... Glucose in contrast tends to attenuate the synthesis of the majority of them. RNA analysis confirms that their induction and repression reflect changes in the levels of their transcripts. ... Enzyme Repression...
www.medscape.com/medline/abstract/9872416
Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice Journal ... Phil Mollon’s Freud and False Memory Syndrome (2000) gives a succinct account of Freud’s early clinical experiences, and of his theories of repression and the nature of memory.
www.srmhp.org/0202/review-01.html