Nicola Carone is a Psychotherapist and Associate Professor of Dynamic Psychology (PSIC-04/A) at the University of Rome Tor Vergata, where he teaches in the areas of the psychodynamics of parenting and the psychopathology of family bonds. His research investigates the psychodynamics of relationships across diverse family configurations (including LGBTQ+ parent families, single-parent families, and different-sex-parent families formed through assisted reproductive technology), examining the role of primary interactions in individual and family psychic development. Within this framework, he focuses on the fantasmatic, motivational, and intentional components of parenthood and parent–child interaction, the intergenerational transmission of attachment patterns, and the specific features of parenting in high-risk contexts (including filicide, burnout, and regret). He is also engaged in the psychodynamic assessment of parental functioning and in the integrated use of narrative and observational tools to analyze relational models and dyadic/triadic interactions, with the aim of developing and testing targeted interventions to support parenting. He collaborates with several research groups and has authored numerous national and international publications.