 |
1 |  |  Klein believed that the infant's relationship to the served as a model for later object relationships. |
 |
 |
2 |  |  Object relations theory is an offspring of instinct theory. |
 |
 |
3 |  |  According to Klein, are psychic representations of unconscious id instincts. |
 |
 |
4 |  |  Infants , or take external objects, into their psychic structure. |
 |
 |
5 |  |  An infant adopts the position to fight off feelings of persecution. |
 |
 |
6 |  |  Klein's position consists of feelings of anxiety over losing a loved object combined with a sense of guilt for desiring to destroy that object. |
 |
 |
7 |  |  With the psychic defense mechanism of , infants attempt to manage the good and bad aspects of themselves by keeping apart incompatible impulses. |
 |
 |
8 |  |  With identification, infants split off unacceptable parts of themselves, project these parts onto another object, and then introjects these parts back into themselves in a changed form. |
 |
 |
9 |  |  Although the is poorly organized at birth, it is strong enough to feel anxiety and to use defense mechanisms. |
 |
 |
10 |  |  A little boy's position is marked by a passive homosexual attitude toward his father. |
 |
 |
11 |  |  During female oedipal development, a girl fears that her will injure her and take away her babies. |
 |
 |
12 |  |  Mahler emphasized the psychological of the infant. |
 |
 |
13 |  |  Kohut emphasized the evolution of the from a vague image to a clear sense of individual identity. |
 |
 |
14 |  |  The stage is the first stage of separation anxiety, as viewed by Bowlby. |
 |
 |
15 |  |  The theorist who used the Strange Situation to show the parent/infant relationship was . |
 |