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  1. Abstract. Reviews the book, Beyond the reflection: The role of the mirror paradigm in clinical practice by Paulina Kernberg, Bernadette Buhl-Nielsen, and Lina Normandin (see record 2007-00911-000). This modestly presented volume overflows with insight and new ways of looking at the mirroring experience for children and adolescents.

  2. 14 de abr. de 2006 · KERNBERG--Paulina., M.D. Of Scarsdale, NY, died April 12, 2006 at age 71. Born January 10, 1935 in Santiago, Chile to Isaac and Rebecca (Ostray) Fischer. Dr. Kernberg was an eminent child ...

  3. Paulina Kernberg - Narcystyczne Zaburzenia Osobowości | PDF. Scribd is the world's largest social reading and publishing site.

  4. Estructura de personalidad según Otto Kernberg. CLASIFICACIÓN DE LOS TRASTORNOS DE LA PERSONALIDAD SEGÚN KERNBERG. Informe realizado por Carolina Inostroza y Yanet Quijada (Mayo de 2001). Indice. •Introducción. •Consideraciones Previas. •Clasificación De Las Estructuras De Personalidad. 1) Identidad Del Yo :

  5. PAULINA KERNBERG Carolina Torres Catril R1 Psiquiatría infantoadolescente UCSC Psicología del Desarrollo Noviembre 2020 fBibliografía Paulina Kernberg nació en Chile en 1935, se graduó del colegio a los 17 años y ya era médico a los 23. En Santiago de Chile recibió sus títulos de licenciatura y medicina de la Universidad de Chile.

  6. Download Free PDF. View PDF. IN MEMORIAM Paulina Kernberg, M.D. (1935Y2006) Paulina Kernberg was an inspired student of children who devoted her professional life to securing their well-being and treatment. She leaves behind a legion of admirers including her husband, Otto, and their children, Martin, Karen, and Adine and their six children.

  7. 20 de ago. de 2008 · Paulina Kernberg died before the book’s publication. In the afterword, her daughter describes the work as “…her last comprehensive creative effort, spanning over ten years of intense observation, reading, integration, and writing…reveal[ing] her love of children and her continual curiosity about how they develop, as well as her anguish at their ‘silent suffering’” (2006, p. 193).