**6. Conclusions**

Psychotherapy appears efficacious in enabling sufferers of psychological trauma to better cope with the memories of their traumatic experience, with the reconstruction of the traumatic memories (Peres et al., 2007). Emotionally-charged memories are subjective representations of an event, often distorted and distant from the original episode, but salient in their significance to the individual (Creamer et al., 2005). Although there is a marked degree of inter individual variability in the processing of memory of life-events and basic emotions, we postulate that the re-interpretation and reconstruction of traumatic memories will be efficacious in relieving PTSD symptomatology. This process will influence the neural networks sub serving these experiences, leading to the formation of new memories that are less fragmented and available for narrative expression, an idea that is consistent with neuroimaging and clinical observations. Understanding the neural processes associated with successful response to psychotherapy may point to specific mechanisms that can be

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#### **7. References**


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