Nikolaeva V.V., Arina G.A. (2009). Clinical Psychology of Corporeality: Principles of Cultural-Historical Subject Analysis. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 2, 441-456
The psychology of corporeality is a new and intensively elaborated branch of science.
The theoretical foundations of its subject differ significantly from those of
medical psychosomatics. In a given article some new concepts of this approaching
discipline are introduced and the role of symbolic mediation in genesis of different
psychosomatic diseases is discussed.
Sokolova E.T. Burlakova N.S. (2009). Reconstructin of Inner Dialogue in the Psychotherapeutic Process (A Case Study). Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 2, 413-440
Basing on Vygotsky’s cultural-historical methodology, Bakhtin’s conception of inner
dialogue, and some ideas of object relations theory, the authors propose an integrative
approach to self-awareness in psychotherapy. Serious attention is paid to
the predictors of borderline personality disorders and comorbid illnesses: pathogenic
family conditions of personality development and, in consequence of them,
splitting and structural distortions of self-awareness. The descriptive-analytic, semiotic
and dialogical procedures of analysis of verbal communications between
patient and psychotherapist were elaborated and approbated.
The theoretical model of the establishment of the syndrome of early infantile
autism is elaborated including all the stages of this establishment. According to
Vygotsky and his ideas about the hierarchical organization of pathological syndromes,
there is the definition of the difference between the structure and the
function of the primary (biological) and secondary (sociological) phenomena of
the syndrome of early infantile autism.
The article shows the role of the attachment system (child-mother interactions) in
development of a wide spectrum of individual personality characteristics. Emotional
attachment of the child to mother is considered as a complicated system
of internal regulation and a basis of typology of mental development. Results of a
series of empirical studies show the connection between the type of attachment,
formed at the early stages of child development, and characteristics of his/her autonomy,
consciousness (self-concept and self-esteem) and empathy in preschool
and middle childhood.
Malykh S.B., Gindina E.D., Nadyseva V.V. (2009). Genetic and Environmental Influences on Temperament in Adolescence. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 2, 361-384
This study, which is a part of a Moscow longitudinal twin project, aims to explore
genetic and environmental contributions to inter-individual variability of temperamental
traits in adolescence on the basis of a Russian sample. 85 monozygotic
(MZ) and 64 same-sex dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs aged 12 – 14 years completed the
children version of Rusalov Structure of Temperament Questionnaire (C-STQ). The
results of model-fitting analyses indicate considerable hereditary determination
of individual differences in 3 out of the 8 C-STQ dimensions - social tempo, objectrelated
emotional sensitivity, and social emotional sensitivity. Non-shared environmental
effects explained the rest of the total variance in these dimensions. Individual
differences in the other STQ dimensions were due to environmental factors.
An advanced strategic behavior, which we term, “Trojan horse” teaching (THT), is
described. In this type of counteractive behavior, a “teacher”, ostensibly helping his
or her rival to learn something, really teaches the rival useless or disadvantageous
things. This interaction is an object of interdisciplinary research related to the theory
of human capital, the theory of agency, knowledge management, the theory
of conflict, and to social and educational psychology. Examples of THT in real life,
and results of experiential studies, including the administration of a survey concerning
people’s beliefs about teaching “with evil intent”, and a set of experiments
with participation of adults and children, have been described. Possible directions
of artificial intelligence systems development related to THT are described. General
relations between: (a) counteraction to learning, and (b) development in spite
of the counteraction are discussed.
The recent revolutionary changes in the cognitive psychology of development,
touching upon the basic conceptions of psychology, are generalized in this article.
The problem of theoretical changes connected with systemic evolutionary approach,
dynamic nonlinear system theory, and connectionism, is discussed. The
author analyses four basic theses of revolutionary changes: from sensory-motor
infant to representative one; from the leading role of activity to the unity of perception
and action; about the continuity of the subject formation, instead of axiom
of subjectivity of the adult, mature person; about the continuance of genetic and
environmental instead of social primacy in the mental development of a person.
There are key arguments of new conceptions, obtained by the author and other
researchers.
Keywords:
revolutionary changes, cognitive development, early ontogenesis, representative infant, perception and action, ontogenesis of subjectivity, theory of mind, theories of mental formation.
Academic Achievement in College: the Predictive Value of Subjective Evaluations of Intelligence and Academic Self-concept
Kornilova T.V. (2009). Academic Achievement in College: the Predictive Value of Subjective Evaluations of Intelligence and Academic Self-concept. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 2, 309-326
The study examined the relationship between self-, peer- and test-estimated intelligence,
academic self-concept and academic achievement. Subjective evaluations
of intelligence and academic self-concept had incremental predictive value over
conventional intelligence when predicting achievement accounting for more than
40% of its variance. The obtained pattern of results is presented via SEM-model
which accounts for 75% variance in the latent factor of academic achievement.
Author suggests the importance of further studying complex sets of achievement
predictors from ability, personality and mediating domains.