The CEU Department of Cognitive Science cordially invites you to a talk
(as part of its Departmental Colloquium series)
by
Szabolcs Keri, University of Szeged, Hungary; National Psychiatry
Center, Budapest, Hungary
and
Einat Levy, Rutgers University, Newark, USA
on
Trauma has no Race and Nation: a Perspective of Clinical Neuroscience
Date: Wed, February 1, 2012 - 17:00 - 18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Frankel Leó út 30-34.,
Room G15
ABSTRACT: Psychological trauma, an overwhelming experience of various
threatening situations during which the survival, safety, and integrity
of the self are severely endangered, can occur in various cultural
environments. Posttraumatic stress reactions include intensive and
prolonged fear and anxiety, detachment from reality, intrusive
recollection (nightmares, flashbacks, and aversive memories), avoidance
behavior, emotional numbness, depression, and social isolation. These
reactions are expressed, interpreted, and treated in a unique way in
different cultures. Here, we argue that behind the cultural diversity
psychological trauma is associated with uniformly altered basic
associative learning processes. By the comparison of trauma-exposed
individuals from the Middle East (victims of terrorist attacks and
military trauma) and Hungary (the natural disaster of redsludge flood
and other civilian traumas), we show that context reversal learning is
identically disrupted, together with structural alterations in the
hippocampal formation and amygdala. Results from these studies suggest
that human suffering related to traumatic experiences shares the same
neurocognitive and neuroanatomical bases regardless of culture, race,
and ethnicity.
We're looking forward to see you there (Frankel Leo u. 30-34) !
Christophe Heintz, for the CEU Department of Cognitive Science
http://cogsci.ceu.hu