The Seba library treats Titration in 9 passages, across 7 authors (including Levine, Peter A., Laurence Heller, Ph D, Payne, Peter).
In the library
9 passages
Pendulation and titration — together form a tightly-knit dyad that allows individuals to safely access and integrate critical survival-based, highly energetic states. Together, they allow trauma to be processed without overwhelm
Levine defines titration as the fourth foundational step in SE practice, constituting with pendulation an inseparable dyad that enables trauma processing without retraumatization.
Levine, Peter A., In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness, 2010thesis
By approaching traumatic experiences slowly and obliquely, we are using a technique from Somatic Experiencing called titration. Titration is a word borrowed from chemistry.
Heller explicates titration as a technique derived from SE in which traumatic experience is approached incrementally, with the chemical metaphor foregrounding the logic of controlled dosage.
Laurence Heller, Ph D, Healing Developmental Trauma How Early Trauma Affectsthesis
The therapist must approach this Gordian knot carefully and untangle it through deliberate and careful titration, along with reliance on the experience of pendulation and a resolve to befriend intense aggressive sensations.
Levine prescribes titration as the clinician's primary instrument for navigating the entanglement of immobility, shame, and suppressed rage in traumatized individuals.
Levine, Peter A., In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness, 2010thesis
All the key elements of SE are demonstrated here: presence, embodied resource, titration, pendulation, discharge, and biological completion... Titration is evident in the emphasis on slowing down.
Payne enumerates titration as one of the canonical elements of SE practice and demonstrates it clinically through the deliberate slowing of therapeutic pace.
Payne, Peter, Somatic experiencing: using interoception and proprioception as core elements of trauma therapy, 2015supporting
the restoration of defensive responses has the effect of automatically titrat[ing]
Levine observes that the recovery of truncated self-protective movements produces titration as an endogenous effect rather than solely a therapist-imposed intervention.
Levine, Peter A., In an Unspoken Voice: How the Body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness, 2010supporting
carefully differentiating secondary, defensive, or pathogenic affects, all of which require regulation, titration, and transformation, from adaptive emotions and core affective experiences
Courtois, drawing on AEDP, applies titration specifically to pathogenic affects that require measured regulation before transformation can occur.
Courtois, Christine A, Treating Complex Traumatic Stress Disorders (Adults) supporting
Whether this is due to a titration of disturbance or facilitation of associative processes is yet to be determined.
Shapiro raises titration as one of two competing explanatory hypotheses for EMDR's therapeutic mechanism, situating the concept within a broader debate about exposure-based processing.
Shapiro, Francine, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR): Basic Principles, Protocols, and Procedures, 2001supporting
She and her therapist decided the first sliver would be an image of herself as a 6-year-old, trying to 'not be noticed' before an abusive incident.
Ogden illustrates titration in practice through the clinical technique of working with a 'sliver' of traumatic memory, operationalizing measured, incremental contact with traumatic content.
Ogden, Pat, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy Interventions for Trauma and, 2015supporting
potentiated a reduction in self-administration following pre-session treatment with alcohol (showing titration of alcohol drinking in relation to the interoceptive effects)
Lovelock employs 'titration' in a neuroscientific rather than psychotherapeutic register, describing self-regulatory adjustment of alcohol intake in response to interoceptive signals.
Lovelock, Dennis F., Interoception and alcohol: Mechanisms, networks, and implications, 2021aside