The Power Therapies
... of situations.is paper presents a theory of how competition among stimuli may be the basis for how the Power Therapies work. The compelling features of these therapies are that they all interrupt old habits and conditioned reflexes and provide new habits and conditioning. Therefore, many of the prot ...
... of situations.is paper presents a theory of how competition among stimuli may be the basis for how the Power Therapies work. The compelling features of these therapies are that they all interrupt old habits and conditioned reflexes and provide new habits and conditioning. Therefore, many of the prot ...
the role of verbal conditioning in third generation behavior
... session. The goal of many of these studies was to target behaviors seen as critical to various populations. For example, with an extremely difficult clinical population such as “sociopaths” verbal conditioning was shown to be effective (Bryan & Kapsche, 1967). They worked with male “sociopaths” to c ...
... session. The goal of many of these studies was to target behaviors seen as critical to various populations. For example, with an extremely difficult clinical population such as “sociopaths” verbal conditioning was shown to be effective (Bryan & Kapsche, 1967). They worked with male “sociopaths” to c ...
The Hidden Logic of Anxiety
... really feel that if I panic, if I just suffer, it keeps anything bad from happening.” I prompted her: “Let your next words come from that feeling, and tell me why bad things happen.” To her surprise, Carmen then described certain metaphysical rules of suffering that she hadn’t known were a powerful ...
... really feel that if I panic, if I just suffer, it keeps anything bad from happening.” I prompted her: “Let your next words come from that feeling, and tell me why bad things happen.” To her surprise, Carmen then described certain metaphysical rules of suffering that she hadn’t known were a powerful ...
suicide: what therapists need to know
... There are many misconceptions about suicide, one of them being that suicidal people want to die and cannot be helped. What both mental health professionals and the public should know is that the suicidal state is almost always transient and treatable. Therapists can prepare themselves for working wi ...
... There are many misconceptions about suicide, one of them being that suicidal people want to die and cannot be helped. What both mental health professionals and the public should know is that the suicidal state is almost always transient and treatable. Therapists can prepare themselves for working wi ...
48x36 Poster Template
... Subjective: The therapist’s reactions to the client originate from the therapist’s own unresolved conflicts and anxieties which may be harmful to the therapeutic process if undetected Objective: The therapist’s reactions to the client are evoked primarily by the client’s maladaptive behaviors whic ...
... Subjective: The therapist’s reactions to the client originate from the therapist’s own unresolved conflicts and anxieties which may be harmful to the therapeutic process if undetected Objective: The therapist’s reactions to the client are evoked primarily by the client’s maladaptive behaviors whic ...
Aalborg Universitet Turn-taking in music therapy with children with communication disorders
... 1992). Turn-maintaining cues signal that the speaker wishes to continue. If the listener shows signs of wanting to speak, the speaker will therefore speak louder and faster and generally exhibit cues that are the opposite of turn-yielding. Turn-denying cues show that one does not want to take the fl ...
... 1992). Turn-maintaining cues signal that the speaker wishes to continue. If the listener shows signs of wanting to speak, the speaker will therefore speak louder and faster and generally exhibit cues that are the opposite of turn-yielding. Turn-denying cues show that one does not want to take the fl ...
Chapter 5 - University of Colorado Denver
... there is an unusually great tendency for therapeutic modalities that appear to make "common sense" to the practitioner and public to be found to be largely or completely ineffective after millions of dollars have been spent delivering this therapy to the public. In some cases, such as that of replac ...
... there is an unusually great tendency for therapeutic modalities that appear to make "common sense" to the practitioner and public to be found to be largely or completely ineffective after millions of dollars have been spent delivering this therapy to the public. In some cases, such as that of replac ...
The Emotional‐Cognitive Processing Model
... each menu item at Burger King. Instead, Burger King consumers refine their selection based on previously developed attitudes – meat, health or price preferences, for instance. These attitudes, depending on its strength, simplify where people begin to weigh their choices – maybe disregarding the chic ...
... each menu item at Burger King. Instead, Burger King consumers refine their selection based on previously developed attitudes – meat, health or price preferences, for instance. These attitudes, depending on its strength, simplify where people begin to weigh their choices – maybe disregarding the chic ...
Cognitive- Behavioral Therapy for Adults
... There is strong support for the efficacy of individual exposure therapy administered to a range of trauma populations (men and women; survivors of military trauma, physical and sexual assault, childhood sexual abuse, motor vehicle accidents, political violence) from 22 randomized Agency for Health C ...
... There is strong support for the efficacy of individual exposure therapy administered to a range of trauma populations (men and women; survivors of military trauma, physical and sexual assault, childhood sexual abuse, motor vehicle accidents, political violence) from 22 randomized Agency for Health C ...
Careers in counselling and psychotherapy
... •• Offer a longer-term process of treatment that identifies emotional issues and the background to problems and difficulties In actual fact both counselling and psychotherapy can be longterm or short-term, they can focus on the here and now or past experiences. They both help someone to make more se ...
... •• Offer a longer-term process of treatment that identifies emotional issues and the background to problems and difficulties In actual fact both counselling and psychotherapy can be longterm or short-term, they can focus on the here and now or past experiences. They both help someone to make more se ...
A Self-Determination Theory Approach
... third-party payers who want indication that treatment will impact important outcomes if they are to pay for it (Parry, 2000). In clinical psychology this emphasis on evidence-based treatments has resulted in attention being paid to compiling specific, often manualized, methods designed to change tar ...
... third-party payers who want indication that treatment will impact important outcomes if they are to pay for it (Parry, 2000). In clinical psychology this emphasis on evidence-based treatments has resulted in attention being paid to compiling specific, often manualized, methods designed to change tar ...
Redalyc. Pavlov and the Foundation of Behavior Therapy
... to a dog’s skin preceding food delivery, and found that as long as the aversive conditioned stimulus (CS) for food was applied to one part of the dog’s body, defensive behaviors were eliminated and replaced by a conditioned salivary response. This effect was termed counter-conditioning, and it was d ...
... to a dog’s skin preceding food delivery, and found that as long as the aversive conditioned stimulus (CS) for food was applied to one part of the dog’s body, defensive behaviors were eliminated and replaced by a conditioned salivary response. This effect was termed counter-conditioning, and it was d ...
The evolutionary psychology of the emotions and their relationship to
... see also Nesse, 1991). In this chapter, we (1) briefly state what we think emotions are and what adaptive problem they were designed to solve; (2) explain the evolutionary and computational principles that led us to this view; (3) identify how the emotions relate to motivational and other underlying ...
... see also Nesse, 1991). In this chapter, we (1) briefly state what we think emotions are and what adaptive problem they were designed to solve; (2) explain the evolutionary and computational principles that led us to this view; (3) identify how the emotions relate to motivational and other underlying ...
Emotional contagion
... Emotions theorists point out that emotional experience may be influenced by three different processes: (1) the central nervous system commands that direct such mimicry/synchrony in the first place; (2) the afferent feedback from such facial, verbal, or postural mimicry/synchrony; or (3) conscious se ...
... Emotions theorists point out that emotional experience may be influenced by three different processes: (1) the central nervous system commands that direct such mimicry/synchrony in the first place; (2) the afferent feedback from such facial, verbal, or postural mimicry/synchrony; or (3) conscious se ...
IMPACt oF A ReLAtIonsHIPs DeVeLoPMent GRouP on stuDents’ InteRPeRsonAL CoMMunICAtIon AnD ReLAtIonsHIPs
... such as the corporate world to psychiatric hospitals for numerous purposes and with powerful impacts for its members (Avery 1996). In this article, the concepts ‘group therapy’ and ‘group psychotherapy’ will be used interchangeably. When turning to what group therapy within the context of psychother ...
... such as the corporate world to psychiatric hospitals for numerous purposes and with powerful impacts for its members (Avery 1996). In this article, the concepts ‘group therapy’ and ‘group psychotherapy’ will be used interchangeably. When turning to what group therapy within the context of psychother ...
COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL APPROACHES
... Classical, or respondent, conditioning provides the theoretical and empirical base for behavioral psychology and bears little resemblance to the cognitive or cognitivebehavioral models of today. It is based in Pavlov’s work on stimulus-response and he believed that this reflexive and mechanistic vie ...
... Classical, or respondent, conditioning provides the theoretical and empirical base for behavioral psychology and bears little resemblance to the cognitive or cognitivebehavioral models of today. It is based in Pavlov’s work on stimulus-response and he believed that this reflexive and mechanistic vie ...
Aaron T. Beck: The cognitive revolution in theory
... 1977). Patients in that trial were not only as likely to respond to cognitive therapy as to medications, but they also were considerably more likely to stay well after treatment termination. This was not only the first time that any psychosocial treatment had held its own with medication in the trea ...
... 1977). Patients in that trial were not only as likely to respond to cognitive therapy as to medications, but they also were considerably more likely to stay well after treatment termination. This was not only the first time that any psychosocial treatment had held its own with medication in the trea ...
Chapter 15 Power Point: Psychological Therapies
... • Therapy: treatment methods aimed at making people feel better and function more effectively • Two broad categories: – one based primarily in psychological theory and techniques – the other uses medical intervention to bring symptoms under control ...
... • Therapy: treatment methods aimed at making people feel better and function more effectively • Two broad categories: – one based primarily in psychological theory and techniques – the other uses medical intervention to bring symptoms under control ...
FOUNDATIONS FOR A SYSTEMATIC ECLECTIC
... effectiveness of any of the variables in the first category is lacking. The Vanderbilt psychotherapy project (Strupp & Hadley, 1979), published after the major critiques, is particularly impressive since it was conducted by a long-term skeptic about the effectiveness of the therapist's relationship ...
... effectiveness of any of the variables in the first category is lacking. The Vanderbilt psychotherapy project (Strupp & Hadley, 1979), published after the major critiques, is particularly impressive since it was conducted by a long-term skeptic about the effectiveness of the therapist's relationship ...
Critiquing Pop Psychology
... Data remained sparse, with the ratio between books to studies lowering from .86 (1970s) to .59 (1980, and 90s), meaning that there were more self-help books than studies However one type of self help book was challenged by a focused set of research – subliminal therapy, where information was pre ...
... Data remained sparse, with the ratio between books to studies lowering from .86 (1970s) to .59 (1980, and 90s), meaning that there were more self-help books than studies However one type of self help book was challenged by a focused set of research – subliminal therapy, where information was pre ...
Haptotherapy and Empathy
... Empathy is defined as the ability to imagine and to share the feelings of others. The term is often used in a fairly broad sense, sometimes to refer to a certain attitude (patience, openness) or behavior (listening). However, I will focus on the emotional aspects. In this sense emotional empathy is ...
... Empathy is defined as the ability to imagine and to share the feelings of others. The term is often used in a fairly broad sense, sometimes to refer to a certain attitude (patience, openness) or behavior (listening). However, I will focus on the emotional aspects. In this sense emotional empathy is ...
Trends and Problems in Marital and Family Therapy Research
... 2000; Sprenkle, 2003), the problem is still significant. This is somewhat ironic given that the early family therapy pioneers considered themselves to be family researchers (Wynne, 1983). Family therapy had its roots in research (Sprenkle & Moon, 1996). Now, however, therapists see research as unr ...
... 2000; Sprenkle, 2003), the problem is still significant. This is somewhat ironic given that the early family therapy pioneers considered themselves to be family researchers (Wynne, 1983). Family therapy had its roots in research (Sprenkle & Moon, 1996). Now, however, therapists see research as unr ...
Maquetación 1 - Colegio Oficial de Psicólogos de Madrid
... (Ainsworth, 1989). On this basis, a large body of research attests to the importance of individual differences in adult attachment styles as a predictor of processes and outcomes in couple relationships. Secure individuals report less conflict, greater acceptance of their partners, more interdepende ...
... (Ainsworth, 1989). On this basis, a large body of research attests to the importance of individual differences in adult attachment styles as a predictor of processes and outcomes in couple relationships. Secure individuals report less conflict, greater acceptance of their partners, more interdepende ...
Obsessive compulsive disorder: A review of possible specific
... to calls for support or protection, and whether the self is worthy of receiving help from anyone, in particular the caregiver. For instance, Bowlby (1969) maintained that a child experiencing their parents as emotionally available, responsive, and supportive will construct a self model as being lova ...
... to calls for support or protection, and whether the self is worthy of receiving help from anyone, in particular the caregiver. For instance, Bowlby (1969) maintained that a child experiencing their parents as emotionally available, responsive, and supportive will construct a self model as being lova ...
Cultural Difference and the Therapeutic Alliance: An Evidence
... them (Casas et al., 2002). More specifically, clients working with clinicians of similar ethnic backgrounds and languages tend to remain in treatment longer than do clients whose therapists are not ethnically or linguistically matched (S. Sue, 1998). However, such matches are not always possible. In ...
... them (Casas et al., 2002). More specifically, clients working with clinicians of similar ethnic backgrounds and languages tend to remain in treatment longer than do clients whose therapists are not ethnically or linguistically matched (S. Sue, 1998). However, such matches are not always possible. In ...