Cognition and Behavior Modification |
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Page 88
... employed and weight loss again constituted the dependent variable . Positive coverants were reported to produce sig- nificantly greater reductions than negative coverants . Eating versus non - eating HPBS did not result in significantly ...
... employed and weight loss again constituted the dependent variable . Positive coverants were reported to produce sig- nificantly greater reductions than negative coverants . Eating versus non - eating HPBS did not result in significantly ...
Page 105
... employed in an effort to produce attitude change . Cautela , Walsh and Wish ( 1971 ) , for example , attempted to modify college students ' attitudes about mental retardates . Experimental subjects were trained to pair positive imagery ...
... employed in an effort to produce attitude change . Cautela , Walsh and Wish ( 1971 ) , for example , attempted to modify college students ' attitudes about mental retardates . Experimental subjects were trained to pair positive imagery ...
Page 187
... employed . The results indicated that both the desensitization and the self - instruction groups effected significant im- provements on behavioral , cognitive , and self - report measures . Al- though the cognitive training in this ...
... employed . The results indicated that both the desensitization and the self - instruction groups effected significant im- provements on behavioral , cognitive , and self - report measures . Al- though the cognitive training in this ...
Contents
Chapter One Wherefore Cognitive Behavior Modification? | 1 |
xiii | 9 |
The Illegitimate Leap? | 19 |
Copyright | |
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adaptive analysis anxiety arousal assumption aversive Bandura behavior modification Behavior Therapy behavioral research behaviorists biases Cautela Chapter choice classical conditioning client clinical cognitive behavior modification cognitive contingencies cognitive restructuring cognitive therapies complex component conceptual consequences contemporary control group coping skills counter-control covert conditioning covert modeling covert reinforcement covert sensitization dramatically dysfunction effects empirical evaluation evidence examination example experience experiential experimental factors frequently function havior hypothesis imagery impact improvement individual inference influence information processing inquiries involved Journal label laboratory logical Mahoney maladaptive Meichenbaum memory methodological Observational learning observed offer organism paradigm patterns perception performance perspective pervasive phenomena phenomenon physiological potential presented problem solving procedures Psychology rational-emotive rational-emotive therapy relevance reported response role scientist selective attention self-instructional training self-perception theory self-report self-statements significant Skinner social Social Psychology stimulus strategies subjects suggested symbolic systematic desensitization theory therapeutic therapist thinking tion treatment variables verbal York