Children’s Hospital & Research Center Oakland,
Every Child Counts – First 5 Alameda County and
California Institute of Intregal Studies Somatic Psychology Department
present
Regulation, Attachment and
Emotional Development—Part 2
An On-going Clinical Education Series in
Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health
Relational psychophysiology: physiological dimensions of dyadic states of
consciousness and potential applications to psychotherapy research
Edward Z. Tronick, PhD
Ed Tronick, PhD, is a leader in the field of Infant Parent Mental
Health and for the past decades has been among the preeminent
researchers of infant parent interaction and child development.
Ed has researched and written extensively about cross-cultural
patterns of child rearing; coping, stress and resilience; the developmental
impact of drug-exposure; maternal depression and
infant development, and is among the foremost researchers of
the mutual regulation-dysregulation-repair process using the
“Still Face” experimental design which to developed. He was a
member of the Process of Change Study Group and continues to
be interested in the implications of early development research
for the practice of adult psychotherapy.
Dr. Tronick’s current research with Jacob Ham PhD focuses on
the area of Relational Psychophysiology. In this research they
measure cardiac and skin conductance variables simultaneously
in mothers and infants during interaction, and discuss how
this work relates to our theory on dyadically expanded states
of consciousness and consider how their results might inform
understandings of the psychotherapy process and methods for
psychotherapy research.
In this daylong program Dr. Tronick will present his infant-parent
interaction model, introduce his new work and discuss applications
of his work to the current practice of early intervention
professionals attending the program.
We eagerly invite you to participate in what we expect to be a
profound day of learning and thinking together with this dynamic
writer and researcher.
Recommended Readings: Edward Z. Tronick, The Neurobehavioral
and Social Emotional Development of Infants and Children
(Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology) W. W. Norton;
(July 31, 2007)
For location and registration information,
contact Lorraine Watts at (510) 428-3407
or lowatts@mail.cho.org. For program
information, contact Mary Claire Heffron at
(510) 428-8425 or mheffron@mail.cho.org.