“…The parent-child therapies have in common to target parent-child relationships [9,20,21,30,32], despite different points of entry into the family system: representations, behaviors, or a combination of the two. The psychodynamic psychotherapies focus on the mother's representations concerning the child [13,17,29]: the therapist works on mother's projections onto the child, in particular on a core conflictual relationship with the child and a similar conflict in the mother's past history, in order to increase the mother's ability to differentiate her child from herself and to respond accurately to her child's needs. The behavior-oriented therapies, such as interactional guidance, aim to directly modify mother-infant interactions, without any reference to the mother's past history [35]: videotaped interactions of mother and infant are used by the therapist to help the mother recognize positive interactions and to develop appropriate responsiveness and confidence in her parenting role.…”