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chapter 15 – therapies
chapter 15 – therapies

... 1. Clients suffer from 2. Beck(1967) – depression results from 3. Focuses clients attention 4. Techniques – depressed person 5. Stress-Inoculation Therapy – trains to a. 3 stages 1) client and therapist explore 2) develop new and more 3) applies strategies 6. How Effective? ...
Abstract
Abstract

... dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta of the basal ganglia. Other neuronal fields and neurotransmitter systems are also involved, including non-adrenergic, serotonergic and cholinergic neurons. Since the early 1960s the treatment of PD has been based on the pharmacologic replace ...
Emotion - TeacherWeb
Emotion - TeacherWeb

... sensations differently according to context. There are TWO FACTORS at work: physiological arousal and cognitive interpretation of arousal Think “S” for Schachter-Singer and “S” for situation Link to color afterimages Link to sensation seeking behaviors (bungee ...
VIEW PDF - Hesed House, Dublin
VIEW PDF - Hesed House, Dublin

... learning (Stratton, 2005) can therefore be at the basis of both therapy and the development of therapists. But what is it that we want our clients to learn? My next proposition is that the job of therapy is to help the client to be exploratory and creative. They need to enact ways of being and relat ...
Robert L. Leahy, Presidential Address The Role of Emotion
Robert L. Leahy, Presidential Address The Role of Emotion

... long history, since Plato, and is often viewed as a theme that distinguishes cognitive from psychodynamic approaches. Yet, painful emotions may be an inevitable part of a meaningful life. Contrary to the goal of simply "feeling good," a meaningful life is based on the capacity to "feel everything." ...
Psychotherapy - a procedure in which a trained person establishes
Psychotherapy - a procedure in which a trained person establishes

... developed by Albert Ellis; believed that irrational ideas or thoughts lead us to experience psychological distress; goal is to restructure a person’s belief system into a more realistic, rational, and logical set of views of the world. ...
EPSY 6325 THEORIES OF COUNSELING
EPSY 6325 THEORIES OF COUNSELING

... Learning and behavior change S--->R = B; Operant conditioning Reinforcement (positive & negative), Extinction, Punishment Behavior therapy Goal and characteristics: overt behavior, short, specific goals, active therapist Techniques Systematic desensitization, flooding, aversive counter-conditioning, ...
Summary of Treatments
Summary of Treatments

... rational ones • Beck’s - based on illogical thinking • Rational-Emotive therapy – assume client is a logical thinker but some assumptions are incorrect • Read, listen to tapes, experiment with their assumptions ...
Module 40
Module 40

... Systematic Desensitization – Baby steps Observational Learning – “Fearless Peer” (watching others) ...
- SlideBoom
- SlideBoom

... Action based; change behavior through learning; behavior is the problem, not symptom Doubt the healing power of self-awareness Techniques: ...
Ch 15 - IVCC
Ch 15 - IVCC

...  Focus is on interpersonal problems  Depression  Relationships with others  Events of everyday life ...
Social Psychology: Personal Perspectives (Chapter 14)
Social Psychology: Personal Perspectives (Chapter 14)

... – Social skill, parenting programs, anger management ...
Evaluating Therapies
Evaluating Therapies

... Bad coming in, better coming out – is it therapy or time? Did I pay for nothing? Positive view of therapists even if not better Don’t forget: ...
File
File

...  Significance of secure attachment – insecure attachment leads to abnormal behavior ...
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Emotionally focused therapy

Emotionally focused therapy (EFT), also known as emotion-focused therapy and process-experiential therapy, is a usually short-term (8–20 sessions) structured psychotherapy approach to working with individuals, couples, or families. It includes elements of Gestalt therapy, person-centered therapy, constructivist therapy, systemic therapy, and attachment theory.Emotionally focused therapy proposes that human emotions have an innately adaptive potential that, if activated, can help clients change problematic emotional states or unwanted self-experiences. Emotions themselves do not inhibit the therapeutic process, but people's inability to manage emotions and use them well is seen as the problem. Emotions are connected to our most essential needs. Therefore, the focus on emotions is a common factor among various systems of psychotherapy; one prominent therapist has said: ""The term emotion-focused therapy will, I believe, be used in the future, in its integrative sense, to characterize all therapies that are emotion-focused, be they psychodynamic, cognitive-behavioral, systemic, or humanistic.""
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