Columbine survivors-turned-teachers carry a hidden burden. Explore why treating educators as shields fails, and discover the systemic changes needed to restore true safety.
Memory loss can occur as part of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but it can also be a distinct phenomenon. Not everyone with PTSD experiences memory loss, and not everyone with memory loss has ...
Reduced cerebello-thalamo-cortical functional connectivity during traumatic memory retrieval in PTSD
While many recover after life-threatening events, some develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a condition marked by disruptions in fear processing, memory and emotion regulation. Although post ...
This mixed-methods study examines how participant-identified childhood or youth trauma resurfaces during psychedelic states and how such episodes relate to post-experience trajectories. Including ...
During my dissertation research on combat veterans with post-traumatic stress (PTS), I realized that when discussing traumatic events that lead to PTS, the victim often has a hard time describing the ...
In the study, participants’ traumatic memories were first reactivated, and only then was brain stimulation applied — precisely at the stage when the memory is in a “flexible” state and amenable to ...
A new developmental theory from an Iowa State researcher describes how our memory and perception of trauma can evolve over time, shifting with new experiences and as cognitive and emotional ...
PsyPost on MSNOpinion
Does the body really “keep the score” after trauma? How the debunked idea of “repressed memories” is making a comeback
Have you heard someone say online or in casual conversation, when responding to someone’s struggles, “well, the body keeps ...
In "Crazy: Reclaiming Life from the Shadow of Traumatic Memory," author Lyn Barrett shatters misconceptions by offering a deeply personal, first-hand account of living with DID and healing from the ...
A simple, digital intervention that includes mentally playing Tetris can dramatically reduce intrusive memories of trauma in a month, even to the point of being symptom-free after six months, new ...
It’s normal to occasionally forget where you left your keys, struggle to recall a new name or wonder if you’ve already taken your daily medication. “Everyone has memory slips now and again,” says ...
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