Micropsychoanalysis

A basic form of micropsychoanalysis was first conceived in the 1950s by Swiss psychiatrist Silvio Fanti[1][2] and developed systematically by himself and his collaborators, Pierre Codoni and Daniel Lysek, from the 1970s.

The main distinctive characteristics of micropsychoanalysis are:[4][5] The aim of these technical innovations is to facilitate the labour of free association and the establishment of a bridge with reality.

A combination of coincidental events led Silvio Fanti to modify the methodology of Freudian psychoanalysis.

Later on, and gradually, Fanti introduced what he called the technical innovations and developed a practice and theory specifically micropsychoanalytical.

),[12] was constituted in Switzerland gathering the practitioners of the method discovered and developed by Silvio Fanti, denominated micropsychoanalysis.