Treatment Interventions 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Behaviorists believe…

A

that behavior is generated and maintained by factors external to the person, by various environmental and situational stimuli
psychopathology results from problematic learned patterns

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2
Q

clinical interventions based on classical conditioning

A

involve unlearning previous problematic connections (e.g. connections that have led to phobias, anxiety, or addictions)
change is accomplished using counterconditioning or on classical extinction

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3
Q

counterconditioning

A

based on principal of reciprocal inhibition
reciprocal inhibition = two incompatible responses cannot be experienced at the same time, stronger response will inhibit the weaker
focus of treatment - weakening the maladaptive conditioned response (e.g. fear of rats) by strengthening an incompatible or antagonistic response (e.g. relaxation)

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4
Q

interventions based on counterconditioning (4)

A

aversive conditioning
desensitization
sensate focus
assertiveness training

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5
Q

aversive conditioning

A

conterconditioning technique
only used to eliminate deviant or bad behaviors (e.g. drinking, smoking, fetishes)
conditioned stimulus paired with a new and stronger stimulus
new stimulus elicits a strong negative response that is incompatible with the old conditioned response of pleasure
in vivo or in imagination

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6
Q

aversive conditional example

A

old stimulus of smoking a cigarette is paired with new stimulus of electric shock
new response of pain is stronger than and incompatible with old response of pleasure from the cigarette
learned pairing of smoking with pleasure will be weakened

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7
Q

example of in vivo aversive conditioning

A

Antabuse (disulfiram)

new response of nausea and vomiting when ingesting alcohol is incompatible with prior response of pleasure

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8
Q

aversive conditioning in imagination

A

covert sensitization

e.g. imagining cancer cells destroying one’s body as one takes a puff of cigarette

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9
Q

research on aversive conditioning

A

may have short-term benefits, but not effective in the long run and associated with high rates of recidivism

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10
Q

systematic desensitization

A

developed by Joseph Wolpe
counterconditioning technique
most commonly used to treat specific phobias
patient constructs anxiety hierarchy, patient asked to relax then gradually exposed to feared situation lowest on the hierarchy, moves up on list
imagination or in vivo

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11
Q

research on systematic desensitization

A

previous research suggested systematic desensitization was the most effective procedure for specific phobias
more recent research has concluded that treatments that emphasize prolonged and intense exposure (e.g. flooding) are most efficacious for specific phobias

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12
Q

sensate focus

A

Masters and Johnson
uses pleasure as counterconditioning response to inhibit performance anxiety
pleasure elicited by body massages that are discontinued at the first sign of anxiety

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13
Q

assertiveness training

A

counterconditioning technique
patients practice assertive responses
first role playing with the therapist, and eventually in real-life situations

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14
Q

classical extinction

A

involve presenting the conditioned stimulus without the unconditioned stimulus to the point where the conditioned stimulus no longer elicits conditioned response
examples - flooding or implosive therapy

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15
Q

flooding

A

classical extinction technique
either in vivo or in imaginzation
present CS without US (although we usually don’t know what it is)
exposure continued until fear has extinguished
e.g. exposed to spider and prevented from fleeing

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16
Q

research on flooding

A
prolonged exposure (e.g. 45 minutes) more effective than multiple, briefer periods of exposure which can actually exacerbate fear
flooding with response prevention appears to be more effective than systematic desensitization for agoraphobia, OCD, and specific phobias
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17
Q

implosive therapy

A

classical extinction tehnique
developed by Stampfl
in imagination only
after patient is exposed to feared object in imagination, therapist interprets possible psychosexual themes

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18
Q

clinical interventions based on operant conditioning

A

involve reinforcement or punishment
first, conduct functional assessment of behavior to ID target behavior, antecedents, and consequences
also identifies contingencies (reinforcers and punishers) that serve to maintain the behavior

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19
Q

3 types of reinforcers

A

primary reinforcers - reinforce everyone at all ages and in all cultures (e.g. food)
secondary reinforcers - acquire their reinforcing value through training or experience (e.g. praise)
generalized conditioned reinforcers - not inherently reinforcing, but take reinforcing value because they give person access to other reinforcers (e.g. money, tokens)

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20
Q

shaping

A

person reinforced for every step taken towards achieving a target behavior

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21
Q

intervention strategies involving reinforcement

A
shaping
token economies
contingency contracting
Premack principle
differential reinforcement
self-reinforcement
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22
Q

token economies

A

using tokens in a systematic and consistent manner as reinforcement for appropriate behaviors
originally implemented on schizophrenic inpatient wards - patients given tokens for self-help behaviors (e.g. grooming, making beds) and adaptive, pro-social behaviors
fined tokens for undesirable behaviors (e.g. destroying property)
applied in other institutional settings - with mentally retarded, autistic children, juvenile offenders

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23
Q

contingency contracting

A

operant conditioning technique in natural environment
can be utilized when there are problematic interactions between two or more people
therapist helps people ID behaviors they most want from one another and then helps them negotiate a contract for their exchange

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24
Q

Premack Principle

A

aka the principle or reinforcer relativity
uses high frequency behavior (i.e. something a person does frequently without any outside coercion) to reinforce low frequency behavior
Grandma’s rule
requiring child to eat peas before going out to play

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25
Q

Differential reinforcement of other behaviors (DRO)

A

aka differential reinforcement of incompatible responses (DRI) aka differential reinforcement of alternative responses (DRA)
combines extinction and positive reinforcement

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26
Q

example of DRO

A

hyperactive child is ignored when she speaks out of turn (extinction) but reinforced when she waits for her turn to speak

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27
Q

self-reinforcement

A

administering reinforcement to oneself

e,g. rewarding self for each pound lost

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28
Q

four paradigms that involve elements of aversive control of behavior

A

positive punishment
escape learning
avoidance learning
overcorrection

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29
Q

positive punishment

A

applying an aversive stimulus (e.g. yelling) after an undesirable behavior has been emitted
rarely used in clinical settles
e.g. thought stopping; snapping rubber band on wrist when thinking an undesirable

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30
Q

research on positive punishment

A

merely suppresses behavior, does not eliminate it

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31
Q

escape learning

A

aversive stimulus can’t be avoided altogether
but once aversive stimulus has started, can be stopped by emitting the desired behavior
e.g. animal is shocked, can get the shock to stop by pressing level

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32
Q

avoidance learning

A

can entirely avoid the aversive stimulus by emitting the desired behavior in time
e.g.red light flashes, cueing animal to press level

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33
Q

overcorrection

A

involves restitution or reparation and physical guidance

e.g. child makes mess in living room, required to clean it up as well as another room

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34
Q

clinical applications of social learning theory

A

involve modeling of adaptive behaviors to replace maladaptive ones

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35
Q

three variations of modeling procedures

A

symbolic modeling
live or in-vivo modeling
participant modeling

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36
Q

symbolic modeling

A

involve observing a film in which a model enjoys progressively more intimate interaction with a feared object or anxiety-producing setting

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37
Q

live or in-vivo modeling

A

having person observe a live model engage in graduated interactions with a feared object or anxiety-producing situation

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38
Q

participant modeling

A

live modeling plus contact with model
model gradually guides person in activities involving physically interacting with feared object or dealing with anxiety-provoking situation

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39
Q

Marsha Linehan’s Dialectical Behavior Therapy

A

for persons with borderline personality disorder

acceptance and change

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40
Q

four conditions of DBT

A

1) work in therapy for specific time period (typically a year) and within reason attend all sessions
2) if suicidal behavior present, work on reducing it
3) work on any behaviors that interfere with therapy
4) attend skills training

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41
Q

primary modes of DBT

A

individual therapy
telephone contact - help patient apply skills learned between sessions, help avoid self-injury
skills training - group (mindfulness skills, interpersonal effectiveness skills, emotion regulation skills, distress tolerance skills)
therapist consultation

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42
Q

Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT)

A

Ellis
first CBT, born out of Ellis’s dissatisfaction with psychoanalysis
Emotional disturbances result from irrational beliefs
ABC model
major components: direct instruction, persuasion, and logical dispution to modify beliefs
also includes modeling, homework, relaxation, and rehearsal

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43
Q

REBT ABC Model

A
A) Activating Event
B) Belief
C) Consequence or emotional/behavioral outcome
Behaviorists propose direct A-->C
Ellis proposes that BELIEFS about activating event result in the consequences
D) Disputing intervention
E) adoption of more Effective philosophy
F) new Feelings
(DEF is result of therapy)
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44
Q

Cognitive Therapy

A

Beck
Overlaps with Ellis with regard to cognitive focus
Differs from Ellis in that it emphasizes empirical hypothesis testing as means of changing existing beliefs
Behavioral assignments and homework presented as experiments to test beliefs
Psychological symptoms result from maladaptive thoughts

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45
Q

Beck and depression

A

depression results from maladaptive cognitive triad
negative view of self - self seen as defective and inadequate
negative view of world - events interpreted negatively and there is expectation of failure and punishment
negative view of the future - expectation of continued hardship or negative appraisal of the future

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46
Q

Cognitive Behavior Modification

A

Meichenbaum
self-instructional training and stress inoculation training
focuses on self-statements

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47
Q

Self-instruction therapy

A

Meichenbaum’s CBM
empirically supported for children with ADMD
1) therapist modeling - verbalizes steps involved
2) therapist verbalization - patient performs task while therapist verbalizes steps
3) patient verbalization - patient performs task while verbalizing steps
4) patient silently talks through task
5) independent task performance

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48
Q

protocol analysis

A

slight parallel with self-instruction therapy
person describes aloud the steps being taken to solve the task
used to gain access to people’s problem-solving strategies

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49
Q

stress inoculation training

A

Meichenbaum’s CBM
empirically validated for treatment of PTSD
1) education and cognitive preparation - patients taught their reactions depend upon their interpretation events; also learn that coping abilities profoundly affect subjective experience of stress
2) coping skills acquisition
3) application of skills in imagination and in vivo - apply skills on graduated basis, across increasing levels of stressors
-behavioral rehearsal, modeling, and in vivo exposure

50
Q

Self-Control Model of Depression

A

Rehm
reinforcement can be self-generated rather than derived from external sources
depression is a result of negative self-evaluations, lack of self-reinforcement, and high rates of self-punishment

51
Q

Relapse Prevention

A

Marlatt
views addiction as overlearned habit, teaches recovering addicts to view relapses as inevitable experience
assists addicts to identify the triggers for relapse, develop new behaviors to deal with triggers

52
Q

Freud’s structure of the personality

A

id
ego
superego

53
Q

id

A

most primitive part of the psyche
rules by instincts (basic biological drives) - libido (aka eros/life instincts) and aggression (aka thanatos/death instincts)
largely unconscious, lacks organization, disregards reality
operates upon the pleasure principle, which seeks immediate gratification without concern about long-term, consequences

54
Q

evidence for unconscious id impulses

A

dreams, slips of the tongue, jokes, free association

55
Q

ego

A

modified by interaction with the external world
operates on the reality principle (awareness of real world and consequences of behavior)
able to defer immediate gratification in order to obtain greater long-term gratification
main task = suspend or satisfy the id impulses using means that are rational, socially acceptable, and reasonably safe

56
Q

superego

A

includes individual’s conscience, moral code, and internalized parental and social standards
forces ego to satisfy the id in a manner that is moral and ethical
weapon of superego = guilt
evolves as the child successfully passes Oedipal stage

57
Q

neurotic anxiety

A

results when unacceptable urges of id become too strong to be controlled by the ego, and these impulses begin to edge their way into consciousness
ego unable to control anxiety by rational methods, resorts to ego-defense mechanisms

58
Q

purpose of defense mechanisms

A

prevent the id’s forbidden impulses from entering consciousness
work through self-deception and distortion of reality so that the id’s urges will not have to be acknowledged

59
Q

primary defense mechanisms (8)

A
repression
regression
projection
displacement
reaction formation
intellectualization
rationalization
sublimation
60
Q

repression

A

most basic and commonly used defense mechanism
believed to underlie all other defenses
forcing disturbing impulses out of consciousness

61
Q

regression

A

guarding against anxiety by retreating to behaviors of an earlier, less demanding, and safer stage of development

62
Q

projection

A

seeing one’s unconscious urges in another person’s behavior

e.g. suspicion, paranoia

63
Q

displacement

A

transference of emotions from the original object to some substitute or symbolic representation
can be factor in phobias

64
Q

reaction formation

A

engaging in behaviors that are the exact opposite of the id’s real urges

65
Q

intellectualization

A

distancing the self from one’s feelings

66
Q

rationalization

A

coming up with self-satisfying, yet incorrect reasons for one’s behavior

67
Q

sublimation

A

finding socially acceptable ways of discharging energy from unconscious forbidden desires

68
Q
Theodore Millon - personality disorders
schizoid
narcissistic
paranoid
borderline
histrionic
dependent
antisocial
A
schizoid - intellectualization
narcissistic - rationalization
paranoid - projection
borderline - regression
histrionic - dissociation
dependent - introjection
antisocial - acting out
69
Q

alloplastic vs. autoplastic

A

alloplastic reactions to stress involve trying to change the environment or blaming the external environment (e.g. Borderlines, Narcisstic Personality D/O)
autoplastic reactions to stress involve trying to change oneself or blaming oneself (e.g. MDD, Anxiety)

70
Q

psychoanalysis

A

bringing to light conflicts between id’s impulses and efforts to repress impulses by ego defenses
free association
dream analysis
transference and countertransference

71
Q

ego psychology (+ ego psychologists)

A

focus on ego’s capacity for integration and adaptation
represents transition from ego as helpless rider of the id horse to ego as guiding a person’s capability to master life
Heinz Hartmann, Anna Freud, Erik Erikson

72
Q

Heinz Hartmann

A

“father of ego psychology”
ego arose in parallel with id - people driven by passion AND thinking
“conflict-free sphere” - ego functions occurring and developing outside of conflict (perception, learning, memory, and locomotion)

73
Q

Anna Frued

A
pioneered work (along with Melanie Klein) in applying psychoanalysis with children
noted ego's inherent ability to reconcile drive conflicts with the demands of reality
74
Q

Erik Erikson

A

combined ego psychology and psychosocial life span theory
development occurs in response to social crises
eight stages of ego development
human behavior is interaction between the internal world of the psyche (ego, id, and superego) and the external social world

75
Q

object-relations theory

A

child is “object-related” from birth
object = person (e.g. mother)
inherent drive for satisfying relationships that
focus on obtaining object constancy - integrating good and bad
Melanie Klein, D.W. Winnicott, Margaret Mahler

76
Q

Melanie Klein

A

described splitting as a major defense mechanism used when infant has hostile feelings towards a loved object
out of fear hostile feelings could destroy the loved object, infant “splits” object into two - e.g.good breast (soothing and nourishing) and bad breast (unavailable and witholding)

77
Q

D.W. Winnicott

A

importance of being a “good enough” mother, rather than perfect one

78
Q

Margaret Mahler

A

theory describes the processes of separation (becoming discrete physical entity by physical distancing) and individuation (process of becoming a psychologically independent person)
six stages of development: normal infantile autism, symbiosis, differentiation, practicing, rapprochement, and object constancy

79
Q

Kohut

A

Self Psychology
development of narcissism
“primary narcissism” - healthy kind of narcissism that occurs when baby naturally focuses on getting its own needs met
appropriate caretaker satisfies “selfobject” needs, baby develops healthy self with appropriate and healthy narcissism

80
Q

neo-Freudians

A

focus on impact of social and cultural factors on determining personality
Harry Stack Sullivan, Karen Horney, Erich Fromm

81
Q

Harry Stack Sullivan

A

interpersonal theory
personality exists only in an emotional exchange between people
three modes of existence - prototaxic, parataxic, syntaxic

82
Q

three modes of existence

A

protaxic, parataxic, syntaxic

83
Q

prototaxic mode of existence (Sullivan)

A

birth to 7 months

involves serial sensation and a stream of sensory experiences that are isolated and uncoordinated with one another

84
Q

parataxic mode of existence (Sullivan)

A

8-11 months
involves sequential sensations
dominance of temporal sequence serves as the only conception of causality
transference is an example of a parataxic distortion

85
Q

syntaxic mode of existence (Sullivan)

A

12 months - 2 years

involves causal sensation, logical and analytical thinking, and ability to predict cause from knowledge of their effects

86
Q

Interpersonal Therapy

A

Henry Stack Sullivan
16 sessions
connects patient’s presenting problem to interpersonal difficulties
focused on here and now
commonly targets: grief, role dispute, role transition, or interpersonal deficits

87
Q

Karen Horney - neurosis

A

neurosis is a culturally defined construct, indicating deviation from a common pattern of behavior in a given society
develops from feelings of alienation, basic anxiety, and basic hostility that result from the child’s discovery of helplessness in the face of an all-powerful, indifferent adults

88
Q

Karen Horney’s 3 neurotic trends

A

moving compliantly towards others, moving aggressively against others, moving detachedly away from others

89
Q

Karen’t Horney’s basic anxiety

A

results in a rigid pursuit of safety, familiarity, and security

90
Q

Erich Fromm

A

viewed man’s behavior as resulting from sociocultural and economic conditions
experience of freedom frightened most people
two modes of existence - having and being

91
Q

Erich Fromm’s 2 modes of existence

A

having and being

healthier people live primarily in the being mode

92
Q

Adlerian Psychology

A

Individual Psychology
People strive for superiority or personal competence
First six years motivated by social urges and needs (rather than sexual)
Functioning has to do with capacity to connect socially
All children experience basic feelings of inferiority - can motivate us to master life or contribute to neurosis
Birth order affects functioning

93
Q

Adlerian view of neurosis

A

Maladaptive effort to compensate for feelings of inferiority by adopting unproductive “life-style” (attitudes, aspirations, and behavior patterns)

94
Q

STEP program

A

systematic training in effective parenting
Adler
advocates democratic approach to parenting that values and respects the child’s contribution
natural and logical consequences of behavior as the basis of discipline

95
Q

STEP program’s view of misbehavior

A

misbehavior reflects one of four mistake goals: attention, power, revenge, giving up

96
Q

Jungian Psychology (Analytic Psychology) - structure of psyche

A

includes conscious ego, personal unconscious (similar to Freud’s unconscious), and the collective unconscious

97
Q

Collective Unconscious

A

Jung
transpersonal or impersonal
within collective unconscious are the archetypes

98
Q

archetypes (5 types)

A

primordial images and ideas that have been inherited and are common to everyone from the beginning of life

1) self-wants unity of different parts of personality
2) persona-public mask
3) shadow- dark side
4) anima - feminine side
5) anumus - masculine side.

99
Q

Neurosis according to Jung

A

represents struggle of people to free themselves from the interference of the archetypes with their progress toward personality integration and fulfillment of their potential
not so much an illness, but a striving toward psychological maturity (termed individuation)

100
Q

humanist/existentialists

A

1) phenomenological approach, assumption: to under a person one must understand subjective experience (“phenomenal field”); 2) belief in inherent potential for self-determination & self-actualization; 4) view of therapy as involving authentic, collaborative, & egalitarian relationships bt therapist & pt; & 5) reject traditional assessment techniques & diagnostic labels.

101
Q

teleological (examples)

A

behavior seen as determined by future rather than past

e.g. Adler, Jung

102
Q

Client/Person-Centered Therapy

A

Carl Rogers
Humanistic
emphasized innate tendency towards self-actualization
person continues towards self-actualization unless his/her organismic valuing process is displaced by conditions of worth as a guide for living
to avoid creating conditions of worth, give person unconditional positive regard

103
Q

three characteristics of Client/Person-Centered Therapy

A

Empathy
Warmth
Genuineness

104
Q

Gestalt Therapy

A

Perls
people structure experiences as whole, integrated organisms, not in cognitive or affective fragments
healthy functioning results when individuals are able to maintain flexible and adaptive contact with their own needs and with their environment

105
Q

focus of Gestalt therapy

A

Help pt achieve integration of polarities in personality in order to be a unified whole
empty chair technique - patients play out fantasies by taking on both sides of their conflicts
dream analysis- have client take on each character in the dream
transference challenged - focusing on here and now

106
Q

Reality Therapy

A

Glasser
Helps people clarify vales, look at behavior, see if behavior matches values
Goal: get patients to accept more responsibility for behavior
Used with juvenile delinquents, prison inmates, Schools Without Failures (to reduce dropout rates)

107
Q

Hypnotherapy

A

to treat chronic pain, asthma, conversion symptoms, and substance use,
to aid memory - but research has indicated that people report more false memories than true ones

108
Q

Biofeedback

A

operant conditioning of normally involuntary autonomic nervous system functions to alleviate symptoms
commonly utilized in conjunction with relaxation training

109
Q

thermal biofeedback

A

measures peripheral skin temperature
commonly used to treat migraine headache and Reynaud’s disease
goal: increase peripheral temperature

110
Q

electromyography (EMG)

A

measures surface muscle tension
commonly used to treat tension headaches, joint pain, back pain
goal: reduce EMG levels or equalize the tension in parallel muscle groups

111
Q

electroencephalography (EEG)

A

measures brain waves

used to treat people suffering from hyperactivity or seizure disorder

112
Q

galvanic skin response (GSR)

A

aka electrodermal response (EDR)
measures skin conductivity or sweat
used to treat generalized anxiety
goal: decrease GSR levels

113
Q

research on biofeedback

A

EMG biofeedback for tension headaches and thermal feedback for migraine are effective treatments

114
Q

feminist therapy

A

promote independence and autonomy
view sexism as underlying cause of problems and don’t focus on “pathology” as such
strive for egalitarian relationship with patients

115
Q

Prochask’s Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change

A

1) Precontemplation - individuals do not believe they have a problem; no intention to change
2) Contemplation - begin to acknowledge having a problem, no attempts at change are made
3) Preparation - individuals have developed a commitment to change and begin to construct detailed plan for change
4) Action - behavior change initiated
5) maintenance - at least 6 months after Action stage, individuals take steps to prevent relapse and maintain gains made during previous stage

116
Q

Five Factor Theory of Personality aka Big 5

A
Costa and McCrae (1985)
factor analysis on long list of personality traits and arrive at five basic personality traits (OCEAN)
Openness to experience (O)
Conscientiousness (C)
Extroversion (E)
Agreeableness (A)
Neuroticism (N)
117
Q

Openness to Experience

A

high scorers are open to new ideas, curious, and imagination

low scorers are conventional, have narrow interests, and tend to be artistic

118
Q

Conscientiousness

A

high scorers - responsible, self-disciplined, organized, and achievement-oriented
low scorers - irresponsible, careless, impulsive, lazy, undependable
high degree of conscientiousness is the trait that has been most consistently associated with job success

119
Q

agreeableness

A

high scorers - good-natured, gentle, warm, trusting, and cooperative
low scorers - irritable, argumentative, vindictive, untrusting

120
Q

neuroticism

A

high scorers - emotionally unstable, insecure, anxious, and moody
low scorers - emotionally stable, even-tempered, calm, easy-going, and relaxed

121
Q

Wolfgang Kohler

A

one of earliest critics of pure behavioral models of learning
insight studies with chimps

122
Q

Transactional Analysis (Berne)

A

Focus on transactions (verbal interchanges)
Goal: helping patients become more aware of intent behind what they’re saying
3 ego states - parent, adult, child
life scripts - patterns that have developed that dictate one’s life