John S. Auerbach
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Featured researches published by John S. Auerbach.
Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 1993
Sidney J. Blatt; Beth Hart; Donald M. Quinlan; Bonnie J. Leadbeater; John S. Auerbach
Clinical evidence suggests that various problem behaviors in adolescence can be expressions of dysphoria that have not reached threshold for the diagnosis of depressive disorders. Formulations of two major types of dysphoria distinguish between disruptions of interpersonal relatedness (e.g., feelings of loss or abandonment) and diminished self-esteem (e.g., feelings of self-criticism, failure, or guilt). Adolescents in a suburban high school were given the Achenbach Youth Self-Report, the Adolescent Depressive Experiences Questionnaire, and the Community Epidemiological Survey of Depression for Children (CES-DC). Even after level of depressive symptoms (CES-DC) was partialled out in hierarchical multiple regressions, interpersonal dysphoria significantly accounted for additional variance in predicting internalizing disorders, while self-critical dysphoria added significantly to the explained variance of both internalizing and externalizing disorders, specifically delinquency and aggression in both males and females.
Journal of Personality Assessment | 1990
Sidney J. Blatt; Steven Tuber; John S. Auerbach
Recent theoretical formulations emphasize the importance of the quality of interpersonal relationships in personality development and psychopathology and have resulted in the construction of methods for assessing the representation of interpersonal experiences. The Urist Mutuality of Autonomy (MOA) Scale is one of the most frequently used methods for assessing the quality of interpersonal relationships by evaluating interactions portrayed on the Rorschach between people, animals, and/or things. This study of the relationship of the MOA scale to independent assessments of interpersonal relationships and clinical symptoms in a group of seriously disturbed adolescents and young adults recently admitted to a long-term, open, residential treatment facility revealed that the average quality of interactions portrayed on the Rorschach relates significantly to the severity of clinical symptoms and the presence of thought disorder, but not to the quality of interpersonal relations. In addition, the portrayal of at least one intensively malevolent and destructive interaction on the Rorschach is correlated primarily with measures of thought disorder and impaired reality testing, whereas not giving at least one mutual and benevolent interaction response is correlated with impaired capacity for social adaptation (e.g., inappropriate interpersonal behavior and unmodulated affect). The relative failure to give at least one mutual and benevolent response is also correlated with the severity of clinical symptoms. Though the MOA scale was developed to assess object relations, it seems more consistently to assess aspects of psychopathology, such as the severity of clinical symptoms and the extent of thought disorder, and only secondarily the quality of interpersonal relationships.
European Journal of Personality | 2000
Sidney J. Blatt; John S. Auerbach
Psychoanalytic theory is fundamentally a cognitive theory—a series of attempts to understand the functioning of the human mind. The purpose of this paper is to review the various psychoanalytic models of the mind and to demonstrate how a contemporary psychoanalytic model of the mind, the representational model, derives from earlier psychoanalytic models, how it is congruent with many aspects of contemporary cognitive and developmental theory, and how it provides a theoretical basis for the systematic investigation of personality development, psychopathology, and the therapeutic process. Research using a representational psychoanalytic model is discussed. Open‐ended descriptions of self and significant others (mother, father, and therapist) were evaluated using ratings scales derived from developmental cognitive and psychoanalytic theories. Aspects of these ratings were related significantly to independent assessments of the quality of interpersonal attachment and to the degree of therapeutic change in long‐term, intensive, inpatient treatment of seriously disturbed, treatment‐resistant patients. Copyright
Journal of Personality Assessment | 2016
John S. Auerbach
ABSTRACT Over a long, distinguished career, Sidney Blatt contributed to theory and research in personality development, personality assessment, and psychotherapy. Best known for his 2-configurations model of personality and author or co-author of more than 250 articles and 18 books and monographs, Blatt was also a master clinician, a psychoanalyst who was awarded the 1989 Bruno J. Klopfer Award by the Society for Personality Assessment (SPA) for his contributions to both self-report and performance-based assessment. He was also the president of SPA from 1984 to 1986. This special series contains papers by writers who participated in all aspects of Blatts contributions to personality assessment, both self-report and performance-based. Topics covered include Blatts 2-configurations model of personality, development, and psychopathology; boundary disturbance and psychosis in performance-based assessment; the interaction of gender and personality on narrative assessments; and the Object Relations Inventory and differentiation relatedness, especially as these relate to therapeutic outcome.
Review of General Psychology | 1997
Sidney J. Blatt; John S. Auerbach; Kenneth N. Levy
Psychiatry MMC | 1996
Sidney J. Blatt; David A. Stayner; John S. Auerbach; Rebecca Smith Behrends
Journal of Personality Disorders | 1988
Sidney J. Blatt; John S. Auerbach
Psychoanalytic Psychology | 1996
John S. Auerbach; Sidney J. Blatt
Archive | 1998
Sidney J. Blatt; John S. Auerbach; Mosen Aryan
Archive | 2005
John S. Auerbach; Kenneth N. Levy; Carrie E. Schaffer