Once transference neurosis has developed, it leads to a form of Ego to solve the infantile conflicts in new ways.
2.
The replacement of the infantile neurosis by transference neurosis and its resolution through interpretation remains the main focus of the classical psychoanalytic therapy.
3.
Although it is more likely for transference neurosis to develop in psychoanalysis, where the sessions are more frequent, it may also appear during psychotherapy.
4.
Freud considered such neurosis as impervious to psychoanalytic treatment, as opposed to the transference neurosis where an emotional connection to the analyst was by contrast possible.
5.
In other types of therapy, either the transference neurosis does not develop at all, or it does not play a central role in the therapy process.