“…A term generally ascribed to Johann Herbart (as cited in Erdelyi, 2006), and later taken on by Freud (1915) to denote a defensive function responsible for creating much of the unconscious, repression, "turning something away, and keeping it at a distance, from the conscious" [his italics] (Freud, 1915, p. 147), has proven itself an instrumentally demonstrable proposition at once obvious and empirically elusive (Michael and Benjamin, 2006). Current research into the topic has approached this metapsychological cornerstone from various ancillary perspectives, ranging from the Pavlovian mathematical modeling and experimental determination of the neuropharmacology associated with SSRI therapy and the suppression of aversive predictions (Dayan and Huys, 2008;Crockett et al, 2012;Huys, et al, 2012), to the resource-depletion framework of task aligned/misaligned cognitive functioning (Storbeck, 2011), or the optogenetic activation of individual brain circuits and structures such as the amygdala, which mediates anxiety, and is sure to have a role in repression (Freud, 1926;Deisseroth et al, 2011;Norman, 2010Norman, , 2011.…”