Results 241 to 250 of about 2,857,564 (301)
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A rating scale for phobic disorders

Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1983
ABSTRACT– – Scales were constructed for the rating of phobic disorders, taking into account both behaviour therapeutic and psycho‐dynamic aspects. The scales rate phobic behaviour with regard to anxiety (situational and anticipatory) and coping (avoidance and escape).
J. E. Alström   +2 more
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Phobic Disorders in the Elderly

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1991
Sixty confirmed cases of phobic disorder identified in an urban elderly community sample were compared with 60 controls matched pairwise for age and sex. Cases reported higher rates of specific and non-specific neurotic symptoms, and all were assigned to a diagnostic catego class, compared with seven of the controls.
J. Lindesay
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Racial Differences in Prevalence of Phobic Disorders

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1990
Few community-based field studies have examined racial differences in the prevalence of phobia disorders. Using data from two sites of a large epidemiologic survey, this study investigates risk factors associated with the one-month prevalence of phobia disorders from 2340 black and 3936 white respondents.
Linda K. Sussman   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Self-Efficacy, Anxiety, and Phobic Disorders

1995
Anxiety and phobic disorders are among the most prevalent, distressing, and disabling of psychosocial problems. They are problems that have long fascinated psychological theorists, and were the first phenomena to which self-efficacy theory was applied (Bandura, 1977; Bandura & Adams, 1977; Bandura, Adams, & Beyer, 1977).
S. Williams
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Genes, Fears, Phobias, and Phobic Disorders

Journal of Counseling & Development, 1990
It has become widely accepted that we may be biologically “prepared” to associate fear more easily with some stimuli (e.g., heights) than with other stimuli (e.g., electric outlets). The current literature on the topic of the genetics of fears and phobias is surveyed with an eye toward answering the question “What might be heritable?” For ordinary ...
G. Carey
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Behaviour Therapy and Phobic Disorders

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1963
There are a number of established forms of treatment for neurotic symptoms. In some patients symptoms are relieved by drugs which control anxiety, in others by antidepressant drugs (Sargant and Dally, 1962), still others appear to respond to some form of individual or group psychotherapy.
M. G. Gelder, V. Meyer
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Contingent Negative Variation and Phobic Disorders

Neuropsychobiology, 1983
The authors studied the modifications in contingent negative variation (CNV) in a group of rupophobic subjects. A slide-projected phobogenic or a neutral stimulus was administered 5 s prior to the warning stimulus (S1). A marked reduction in CNV amplitude and the appearance of post-imperative negative variation were observed when the phobogenic ...
Andrea Rizzo   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Contingency management, self-control, and education support in the treatment of childhood phobic disorders: a randomized clinical trial.

Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1999
This study evaluated the relative efficacy of an exposure-based contingency management (CM) treatment condition and an exposure-based cognitive self-control (SC) treatment condition relative to an education support (ES) control condition for treating ...
W. Silverman   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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