Results 111 to 120 of about 819,965 (169)
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Psychiatric Services, 1983
The authors examine the broad field of behavior therapy, the theories underlying its development, and the techniques that are used to change behavior. They review recent developments in behavior therapy as they relate to behavioral medicine and to treatment of psychiatric disorders, and briefly describe the use of cognitive behavior therapy in the ...
G W, O'Neill, R, Gardner
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The authors examine the broad field of behavior therapy, the theories underlying its development, and the techniques that are used to change behavior. They review recent developments in behavior therapy as they relate to behavioral medicine and to treatment of psychiatric disorders, and briefly describe the use of cognitive behavior therapy in the ...
G W, O'Neill, R, Gardner
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Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 1993
As we approach the latter years of the twentieth century, a century that witnessed the birth of the behavior therapy movement, it becomes increasingly important to understand the forces that shaped the development, advancement, and success of behavior therapy. This paper is an introduction to a series of articles analyzing how major behavioral theories
G H, Eifert, J J, Plaud
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As we approach the latter years of the twentieth century, a century that witnessed the birth of the behavior therapy movement, it becomes increasingly important to understand the forces that shaped the development, advancement, and success of behavior therapy. This paper is an introduction to a series of articles analyzing how major behavioral theories
G H, Eifert, J J, Plaud
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Psychological Bulletin, 1964
The questionable effectiveness of traditional psychodynamic psychotherapies and the development of brief new treatment techniques derived from modern learning theory have stimulated interest in applications of conditioning procedures to behavior disorders.
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The questionable effectiveness of traditional psychodynamic psychotherapies and the development of brief new treatment techniques derived from modern learning theory have stimulated interest in applications of conditioning procedures to behavior disorders.
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Behavior therapy and psychotherapy.
Psychological Review, 1967Weitzman’s article is notable because it represents an early effort on the part of a sophisticated psychologist to reconcile the therapeutic results of systematic desensitization not only with classical psychoanalytic theory; but also with Jungian theory, interpersonal theory; and cognitive decision theory.
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Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology, 2009
IBS is a major drain on health-care resources, partly because the pharmacological management of this condition is currently unsatisfactory. Cognitive behavioral therapy, psychotherapy and hypnotherapy can help by providing a global therapeutic approach for IBS.
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IBS is a major drain on health-care resources, partly because the pharmacological management of this condition is currently unsatisfactory. Cognitive behavioral therapy, psychotherapy and hypnotherapy can help by providing a global therapeutic approach for IBS.
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Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 1993
Behavior therapists make frequent use of insight, but avoid the term because dynamic therapists have formulated it in terms of the unconscious. Insight does not necessarily imply belief in the existence of the "unconscious mind." Behavioral insight consists of making the client aware of the antecedents and consequences of target behavior.
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Behavior therapists make frequent use of insight, but avoid the term because dynamic therapists have formulated it in terms of the unconscious. Insight does not necessarily imply belief in the existence of the "unconscious mind." Behavioral insight consists of making the client aware of the antecedents and consequences of target behavior.
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Cognitive-Behavioral Play Therapy
Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 1998Discusses cognitive-behavioral play therapy (CBPT), a developmentally sensitive treatment for young children that relies on flexibility, decreased expectation for verbalizations by the child, and increased reliance on experiential approaches. The development of CBPT for preschool-age children provides a relatively unique adaptation of cognitive therapy
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Extending the goals of behavior therapy and of cognitive behavior therapy
Behavior Therapy, 1997For the past half century, traditional behavior therapy has done a credible job of helping clients to alleviate their dysfunctional feelings and behaviors and to maintain this improvement. Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT), and some other forms of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), have added to behavior therapy's record of success by including ...
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