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The Science of Cognitive Therapy
Behavior Therapy, 2013Cognitive therapy (CT) refers to a family of interventions and a general scientific approach to psychological disorders. This family has evolved from a specific treatment model into a scientific approach that incorporates a wide variety of disorder-specific interventions and treatment techniques.
Stefan G Hofmann +2 more
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Cognitive Therapy with Adolescents
American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1987Cognitive immaturity and distortion are frequently observed in normal adolescents, as well as those with severe psychiatric and behavioral disorders. Misunderstandings of the therapy process and an unstable therapeutic alliance often complicates treatment.
G R, Schrodt, B A, Fitzgerald
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2023
Cognitive therapy (CT) is a short-term and present-orientated structured therapy focusing on changing cognition to generate helpful adaptations to emotions and behaviors. CT incorporates various techniques to facilitate such change, each of which assumes that negative thoughts result from underlying schemas and dysfunctional beliefs.
Didymus, Faye F., McCarthy, Paul
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Cognitive therapy (CT) is a short-term and present-orientated structured therapy focusing on changing cognition to generate helpful adaptations to emotions and behaviors. CT incorporates various techniques to facilitate such change, each of which assumes that negative thoughts result from underlying schemas and dysfunctional beliefs.
Didymus, Faye F., McCarthy, Paul
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The basics of cognitive therapy
Psychosomatics, 1981Abstract The authors explain the principles of cognitive therapy. The theory behind this therapeutic approach–that thoughts influence feelings–is exemplified with illustrative quotations, descriptions, and a tabular presentation of various forms of cognitive distortion that lead to depression and anxiety.
A R, Childress, D D, Burns
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Archives of General Psychiatry, 1984
To the Editor.— Simons et al should be congratulated for their painstaking study of cognitive changes in psychiatric treatment. 1 Their finding confirms the results of other studies that demonstrated cognitive changes in patients treated with cognitive therapy and also with chemotherapy.
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To the Editor.— Simons et al should be congratulated for their painstaking study of cognitive changes in psychiatric treatment. 1 Their finding confirms the results of other studies that demonstrated cognitive changes in patients treated with cognitive therapy and also with chemotherapy.
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2017
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the main method of psychotherapy generally accepted in the field of substance addiction and non-substance addiction. This chapter mainly introduces the methods and technology of cognitive-behavior therapy for substance addiction, especially to prevent relapse.
Hong, An +3 more
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Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the main method of psychotherapy generally accepted in the field of substance addiction and non-substance addiction. This chapter mainly introduces the methods and technology of cognitive-behavior therapy for substance addiction, especially to prevent relapse.
Hong, An +3 more
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Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 1980
Cognitive family therapy is a new short-term psychotherapy which facilitates self-disclosure. The paper defines self-disclosure and differentiates cognitive self-disclosure from self-exposure and emotional self-disclosure. The relationship of cognitive self-disclosure in facilitating marital intimacy is developed.
E M, Waring, L, Russell
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Cognitive family therapy is a new short-term psychotherapy which facilitates self-disclosure. The paper defines self-disclosure and differentiates cognitive self-disclosure from self-exposure and emotional self-disclosure. The relationship of cognitive self-disclosure in facilitating marital intimacy is developed.
E M, Waring, L, Russell
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Cognitive therapy with inpatients
General Hospital Psychiatry, 1997Psychotherapeutic interventions often play a major role in the treatment of patients who are hospitalized for depression. Much of the "therapeutic milieu" of the inpatient unit includes patient participation in group psychotherapy and in one-on-one psychotherapy with staff members.
S, Stuart +3 more
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Cognitive Therapy with Couples
The American Journal of Family Therapy, 1982Although behavior therapists who treat distressed marriages traditionally have acknowledged that spouses’ cognitive appraisals of each other’s behavior play a role in relationship dysfunction, interventions focusing on cognitive components of relationship problems clearly have played a secondary or even a minor role in formal behavioral approaches ...
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Changes in Cognition with Pharmacotherapy and Cognitive Therapy
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1983SummaryA treatment trial comparing cognitive therapy and pharmacotherapy, alone and in combination, in depressed out-patients, indicated that outcome on cognitive variables was similar to outcome on mood and severity measures, pharmacotherapy being less effective than cognitive therapy or the combined treatment in a hospital and a general practice ...
I M, Blackburn, S, Bishop
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