Cognition and Behavior Modification |
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Page 95
... month follow - up , forty percent of the contacted experimental sub- jects reported being abstinent . All control subjects were drinking at that time . These findings , which are much more conservative than those reported in previous ...
... month follow - up , forty percent of the contacted experimental sub- jects reported being abstinent . All control subjects were drinking at that time . These findings , which are much more conservative than those reported in previous ...
Page 101
... months indicated very favorable data on the absence of actual deviant performances in five of the six cases . A ... Month 101 ( Weekly Rates X 4 ) COVERT EXHIBITIONIST BEHAVIOR OVERT EXHIBITIONIST BEHAVIOR 10 15 3 mos . 6 mos . follow ...
... months indicated very favorable data on the absence of actual deviant performances in five of the six cases . A ... Month 101 ( Weekly Rates X 4 ) COVERT EXHIBITIONIST BEHAVIOR OVERT EXHIBITIONIST BEHAVIOR 10 15 3 mos . 6 mos . follow ...
Page 111
... months indicated that two of the clients were drug abstinent , one had relapsed after 2.5 months , and the third had discontinued drugs but increased alcohol consumption . No other direct experimental tests of covert extinction have ...
... months indicated that two of the clients were drug abstinent , one had relapsed after 2.5 months , and the third had discontinued drugs but increased alcohol consumption . No other direct experimental tests of covert extinction have ...
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