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Trauma-related dissociation and altered states of...
Journal article

Trauma-related dissociation and altered states of consciousness: a call for clinical, treatment, and neuroscience research

Abstract

The primary aim of this commentary is to describe trauma-related dissociation and altered states of consciousness in the context of a four-dimensional model that has recently been proposed (Frewen & Lanius, 2015). This model categorizes symptoms of trauma-related psychopathology into (1) those that occur within normal waking consciousness and (2) those that are dissociative and are associated with trauma-related altered states of consciousness (TRASC) along four dimensions: (1) time; (2) thought; (3) body; and (4) emotion. Clinical applications and future research directions relevant to each dimension are discussed. Conceptualizing TRASC across the dimensions of time, thought, body, and emotion has transdiagnostic implications for trauma-related disorders described in both the Diagnostic Statistical Manual and the International Classifications of Diseases. The four-dimensional model provides a framework, guided by existing models of dissociation, for future research examining the phenomenological, neurobiological, and physiological underpinnings of trauma-related dissociation.

Authors

Lanius RA

Journal

European Journal of Psychotraumatology, Vol. 6, No. 1,

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

December 1, 2015

DOI

10.3402/ejpt.v6.27905

ISSN

2000-8198

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