Effectiveness of enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT
... in eating-disorder treatment [21]. They further claimed that when empirically supported interventions are implemented in practice, they tend to become embedded within more eclectic treatment approaches and are not used in their original forms as evaluated in research clinics. Our study is one of the ...
... in eating-disorder treatment [21]. They further claimed that when empirically supported interventions are implemented in practice, they tend to become embedded within more eclectic treatment approaches and are not used in their original forms as evaluated in research clinics. Our study is one of the ...
Non-pharmacological treatment
... Eight trials directly compared CBT with applied relaxation. CBT was found to be neither inferior nor superior to applied relaxation on the majority of the outcomes. There may be a slight trend favouring CBT on clinician-rated anxiety, which had a narrower confidence interval compared with other outc ...
... Eight trials directly compared CBT with applied relaxation. CBT was found to be neither inferior nor superior to applied relaxation on the majority of the outcomes. There may be a slight trend favouring CBT on clinician-rated anxiety, which had a narrower confidence interval compared with other outc ...
Treatment Options for Various Mental Illnesses
... A. To reduce behavioral symptoms. B. To promote learning and development, particularly the acquisition of language skills. 2. General Guidelines A. Needs a comprehensive and highly individualized treatment program B. Special education and language therapy are essential components C. Medication may b ...
... A. To reduce behavioral symptoms. B. To promote learning and development, particularly the acquisition of language skills. 2. General Guidelines A. Needs a comprehensive and highly individualized treatment program B. Special education and language therapy are essential components C. Medication may b ...
Articulo MC Luciano - International Journal of Psychology and
... features of everyday verbal interactions with infants during the first early years, and may serve to prepare children to respond subsequently to experimental procedures which are analogous to this early history. Given that the world is, in part, a cultural construction and that important perceptual ...
... features of everyday verbal interactions with infants during the first early years, and may serve to prepare children to respond subsequently to experimental procedures which are analogous to this early history. Given that the world is, in part, a cultural construction and that important perceptual ...
Basic Behavioral Concepts (Chapter 1 from The Human Reflex)
... assumptions about the nature of reality and about the most productive methods to employ in seeking to understand the world, they also interpret data in different ways. The following account should help to clarify this point. A certain psychologist (not a behaviorist) who was interested in measuring ...
... assumptions about the nature of reality and about the most productive methods to employ in seeking to understand the world, they also interpret data in different ways. The following account should help to clarify this point. A certain psychologist (not a behaviorist) who was interested in measuring ...
autism spectrum disorders in an adult
... interaction, restricted repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behaviour, and interests and activities causing clinically significant impairment in social, occupational ...
... interaction, restricted repetitive and stereotyped patterns of behaviour, and interests and activities causing clinically significant impairment in social, occupational ...
JAMES NEUBRANDER, MD, is board certified in environmental
... Sterman found that the higher the incidences of the SMR wave form, the lower the incidence of seizure behavior. The SMR has also been shown to coincide with a more relaxed psychophysiological state. In people, neurofeedback is used to train individuals to enhance suboptimal brain wave patterns. Usin ...
... Sterman found that the higher the incidences of the SMR wave form, the lower the incidence of seizure behavior. The SMR has also been shown to coincide with a more relaxed psychophysiological state. In people, neurofeedback is used to train individuals to enhance suboptimal brain wave patterns. Usin ...
Psychotherapy Research
... follows that making the delivery of such techniques uniform across therapists should reduce differences between therapists in their outcomes. Studies that did not employ treatment manuals, therefore, should be on the average more prone to yield therapist effects. Experience level of therapists is an ...
... follows that making the delivery of such techniques uniform across therapists should reduce differences between therapists in their outcomes. Studies that did not employ treatment manuals, therefore, should be on the average more prone to yield therapist effects. Experience level of therapists is an ...
Selective Mutism and Anxiety
... screening studies. These children are likely not identified in studies using clinical samples because children with SM are typically not a “behavior problem” (e.g., aggressive; defiant) in the classroom setting and, therefore, are often not referred for mental health services at the same rate as chi ...
... screening studies. These children are likely not identified in studies using clinical samples because children with SM are typically not a “behavior problem” (e.g., aggressive; defiant) in the classroom setting and, therefore, are often not referred for mental health services at the same rate as chi ...
Values-Centered Interventions: Setting a Course
... time has argued theoretically and empirically for the role of acceptance in the treatment of borderline personality disorders (Linehan, 1987). Christensen and colleagues have pursued the implications of acceptance in the treatment of couples (Christensen, Jacobson, & Babcock, 1995). Others have deve ...
... time has argued theoretically and empirically for the role of acceptance in the treatment of borderline personality disorders (Linehan, 1987). Christensen and colleagues have pursued the implications of acceptance in the treatment of couples (Christensen, Jacobson, & Babcock, 1995). Others have deve ...
Attention-Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder
... elsewhere or as if they are not listening or did not hear what has just been said. There may be frequent shifts from one uncompleted activity to another. Individuals diagnosed with this disorder may begin a task, move on to another, then turn to yet something else, prior to completing any one task. ...
... elsewhere or as if they are not listening or did not hear what has just been said. There may be frequent shifts from one uncompleted activity to another. Individuals diagnosed with this disorder may begin a task, move on to another, then turn to yet something else, prior to completing any one task. ...
Three Dimensions of Oppositionality in Autism
... Relatively little is known about the processes that underpin the development and maintenance of behavioural and emotional disturbances in people with ASD, and this limits quality of clinical care. One approach to increasing knowledge in this area, which we take in the current study, is to test wheth ...
... Relatively little is known about the processes that underpin the development and maintenance of behavioural and emotional disturbances in people with ASD, and this limits quality of clinical care. One approach to increasing knowledge in this area, which we take in the current study, is to test wheth ...
Web Sites and Organizations
... A number of state initiatives have created their own PBIS Web sites. While the information on these Web sites was created for schools and districts in specific states, much of it is useful for those in other states. The resources commonly found on these Web sites that can be used in or adapted for o ...
... A number of state initiatives have created their own PBIS Web sites. While the information on these Web sites was created for schools and districts in specific states, much of it is useful for those in other states. The resources commonly found on these Web sites that can be used in or adapted for o ...
BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION PLAN
... Teaching the value of the alternate/replacement behavior. To help teach Name that (the alternate/replacement behavior) is an effective way to obtain his/her behavioral goals, the following strategies will be employed: NOTE: Include here what rewards will be given and how they will be delivered (on w ...
... Teaching the value of the alternate/replacement behavior. To help teach Name that (the alternate/replacement behavior) is an effective way to obtain his/her behavioral goals, the following strategies will be employed: NOTE: Include here what rewards will be given and how they will be delivered (on w ...
Behavioral Medicine Approaches to Somatoform Disorders
... Kellner, 1986), with a posttreatment effect size of 1.42. Improvements in general psychological symptoms, illness behavior, and health care use were also observed, including a 50% reduction of physician visits, compared with no significant change in the waitlist control group, measured by blind rate ...
... Kellner, 1986), with a posttreatment effect size of 1.42. Improvements in general psychological symptoms, illness behavior, and health care use were also observed, including a 50% reduction of physician visits, compared with no significant change in the waitlist control group, measured by blind rate ...
Behavioral Medicine Approaches to Somatoform Disorders
... Kellner, 1986), with a posttreatment effect size of 1.42. Improvements in general psychological symptoms, illness behavior, and health care use were also observed, including a 50% reduction of physician visits, compared with no significant change in the waitlist control group, measured by blind rate ...
... Kellner, 1986), with a posttreatment effect size of 1.42. Improvements in general psychological symptoms, illness behavior, and health care use were also observed, including a 50% reduction of physician visits, compared with no significant change in the waitlist control group, measured by blind rate ...
childhood and adolescent depression
... themselves or often blame themselves for things. Guilt can also be linked to one's selfevaluation because depressed children often blame themselves for things they do not do right (Coleman, 1986). Hopelessness characterizes those individuals that see no hope in their future and that things will not ...
... themselves or often blame themselves for things. Guilt can also be linked to one's selfevaluation because depressed children often blame themselves for things they do not do right (Coleman, 1986). Hopelessness characterizes those individuals that see no hope in their future and that things will not ...
EPIC: Evidence-based Practice and Innovation Center
... This guide was developed by National Alliance on Mental Illness and is designed to inform families about evidence-based practices (EBPs) in children’s mental health and to share information on an array of treatment and support options. This guide is designed to inform families about the meaning of “ ...
... This guide was developed by National Alliance on Mental Illness and is designed to inform families about evidence-based practices (EBPs) in children’s mental health and to share information on an array of treatment and support options. This guide is designed to inform families about the meaning of “ ...
Treatment Failure in Dialectical Behavior Therapy
... DBT has been the subject of multiple randomized controlled trials and numerous other quasi-experimental studies (see Lynch, Trost, Salsman, & Linehan, 2007, for a review). These studies have suggested that DBT is effective for that which it intends to target, i.e. DBT reduces suicidal and self-injur ...
... DBT has been the subject of multiple randomized controlled trials and numerous other quasi-experimental studies (see Lynch, Trost, Salsman, & Linehan, 2007, for a review). These studies have suggested that DBT is effective for that which it intends to target, i.e. DBT reduces suicidal and self-injur ...
Radical Behaviorism is misunderstood when:
... a. Projection b. Repression 33. Diagram the expanded model of self control choices that involve aversive stimuli. 34. How can a reinforcer have SD/S-Delta effects? Explain using an example. 35. Provide evidence that “creative” or “original” behavior can be strengthened by positive reinforcement. 36. ...
... a. Projection b. Repression 33. Diagram the expanded model of self control choices that involve aversive stimuli. 34. How can a reinforcer have SD/S-Delta effects? Explain using an example. 35. Provide evidence that “creative” or “original” behavior can be strengthened by positive reinforcement. 36. ...
How do tests help us decide whether there is a disability?
... limitation in present functioning. It is characterized by significantly subaverage intellectual functioning, existing concurrently with related limitations in two or more of the following applicable adaptable skills areas: communication, self care, home living, social skills, community use, self dir ...
... limitation in present functioning. It is characterized by significantly subaverage intellectual functioning, existing concurrently with related limitations in two or more of the following applicable adaptable skills areas: communication, self care, home living, social skills, community use, self dir ...
Educational problems in patients with dissociative identity disorder
... one article devoted entirely to educational problems in DID. However, several papers touched briefly on this area. For example, McElroy (1992) and LaPorta (1992) described three individual case reports of school and behavioral problems in children with dissociative disorders. Specifically, LaPorta r ...
... one article devoted entirely to educational problems in DID. However, several papers touched briefly on this area. For example, McElroy (1992) and LaPorta (1992) described three individual case reports of school and behavioral problems in children with dissociative disorders. Specifically, LaPorta r ...
Dimensional analysis of a categorical diagnostic interview: the DICA
... educational, social and cultural variables. Mental health patients were interviewed as a part of their own diagnostic process. Outpatient pediatric patients were volunteers treated for minor physical problems, not suffering any chronic disease. All of these were included in the study because they pr ...
... educational, social and cultural variables. Mental health patients were interviewed as a part of their own diagnostic process. Outpatient pediatric patients were volunteers treated for minor physical problems, not suffering any chronic disease. All of these were included in the study because they pr ...
Guinevere Tuffnell Working with traumatised parents of traumatised
... • Parents may develop ASD or PTSD symptoms when children are exposed to trauma involving life-threat • Parent’s responses impact their perceptions of child reactions (Kassam-Adams et al 2006) • And interact with children’s reactions in determining the course of child children’s psychological recover ...
... • Parents may develop ASD or PTSD symptoms when children are exposed to trauma involving life-threat • Parent’s responses impact their perceptions of child reactions (Kassam-Adams et al 2006) • And interact with children’s reactions in determining the course of child children’s psychological recover ...
Clinical Psychology 8:2
... development at the commencement of grant-supported efforts. Many stage I studies begin with fully developed treatments based on years of nonexperimental clinical experience or on comparatively incremental changes required to adopt existing treatments for a particular target population. Among the curr ...
... development at the commencement of grant-supported efforts. Many stage I studies begin with fully developed treatments based on years of nonexperimental clinical experience or on comparatively incremental changes required to adopt existing treatments for a particular target population. Among the curr ...