TRAUMA TYPES
TRAUMA AND THE BRAIN
TRAUMA AND THE BODY
TRAUMA AND MEMORY
TRAUMA AND ITS IMPACT
100

an 'overwhelming experience that undermines a person's belief that the world is good and safe'

What is trauma?
100

an outdated, but somewhat relevant model of the brain

What is Paul MacLean's (1967) "Triune Brain"

BONUS! Can you answer the parts?

100

behavior responses include: anger outburst, controlling, narcissism, explosive behavior

What is FIGHT?

100

the two types of memory, conscious and unconscious

What is explicit and implicit memory?

100

The three E's of trauma

What is event, experience, and effect?

200
Early adversity that impacts childhood development

What is developmental trauma? (ACEs also counts!)

200

a part of the brain that regulates perception and attention

What is the Thalamus?

200
behavior responses include: workaholism, overthinker, anxiety, panic, OCD, difficulty sitting still, perfectionism

What is FLIGHT?

200

trauma can prevent this memory type from processing information (like words, images, and sounds, etc.) from different parts of the brain from combining to make semantic memory

What is declarative or semantic memory?

200

this organization defines individual trauma as an event or circumstance that results in physical harm, emotional harm and/or life-threatening harm

What is SAMHSA or Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration?

300

a single event (e.g., accident, medical procedure, natural disaster)

What is simple or acute trauma?

300

a part of the brain responsible for emotional behavior, regulation of memory and navigation, and involved stopping the body's stress response

What is the hippocampus?

300

Behavior responses include: difficulty making decisions, feeling stuck, dissociation, isolation, numbness

What is FREEZE?

300

after trauma, a person may get triggered and experience painful feelings, often associated with this memory type; triggering may occur without context

What is emotional memory?

300

an alternative to MacLean's Triune Brain

What is Steffan et al.'s (2022) The Adaptive Brain?

400

multigenerational trauma experienced by a specific cultural, racial, or ethnic group, ongoing marginalization and oppression

What is historical or intergenerational trauma?

400

the "smoke detector" of the brain, involved in perception, attention, and memory

What is the amygdala?

400
behaviors include: people pleasing, lack of identity, no boundaries (or difficulty enforcing them), feeling overwhelmed, co-dependent

What is FAWN?

400

the part of the brain responsible for shutting down episodic memory and fragmentation of the sequence of events

What is the hippocampus?

400
Impaired functions of this part of the brain impact impulse control, attention, judgement, planning, and reasoning

What is the frontal lobe?

500

multiple or ongoing instances (e.g., witnessing violence, ongoing abuse, mass casualty events)

What is complex or chronic trauma?

500

A type of stress response that immediately activates the spinal cord to the adrenal glands, releasing epinephrine and engaging the body into fight or flight

What is short term, or fast acting stress response?

500

the two states of trauma arousal (we aspire to be in states of equilibrium, also known as the window of tolerance or window of capacity)

What is hyper and hypoarousal?

500

The memory types impacted by trauma

Declarative, episodic, emotional, procedural

500

long term, slow acting, chronic stress activates this part of the brain, before releasing ACTH, causing the adrenal glands to release both cortisol and aldosterone

What is the anterior pituitary?