Search results for " Behavioral"

showing 10 items of 561 documents

Effects of a Psychosocial Intervention on the Executive Functioning in Children With ADHD

2011

The purpose of this study was to analyze the effects of an intensive psychosocial intervention on the executive functioning (EF) in children with ADHD. The treatment was carried out in a coordinated manner over a period of 10 weeks with 27 children with ADHD aged 7 to 10, their parents, and their teachers. A battery of neuropsychological tasks was applied to evaluate attention, interference control, verbal and visuospatial working memory, planning ability, and flexibility. The comparative analysis of the treated group of ADHD children and an untreated ADHD group showed significant differences that were especially important in visuospatial memory and planning in favor of the treated childre…

AdultMaleParentsHealth (social science)Short-term memoryImpulsivitypsychosocial interventionbehavioral disciplines and activitiesEducationDevelopmental psychologybehavioral ratingsExecutive Functionmental disordersmedicineADHDHumansAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderChildCognitive Behavioral TherapyIntelligence quotientWorking memoryNeuropsychologyexecutive functionsExecutive functionsmedicine.diseaseFacultyTreatment OutcomeAttention Deficit Disorder with HyperactivityGeneral Health ProfessionsFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyPsychosocialJournal of Learning Disabilities
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Hypochondriasis, Somatoform Disorders, and Anxiety Disorders

2012

The question of whether hypochondriasis (HYP) should be considered a somatoform disorder (SFD) or classified as an anxiety disorder (ANX) has recently been raised. To empirically provide information on this issue, we compared patients with HYP (n = 65) with those with other SFDs (n = 94) and those with ANX (n = 224) regarding sociodemographic and biographical variables, general psychopathology, and naturalistic cognitive-behavioral therapy treatment effects. Compared with SFD, patients with HYP were younger and had fewer comorbid affective disorders and less impaired life domains, suggesting a closer connection between HYP and ANX. Regarding cognitive-behavioral therapy treatment effects, a…

AdultMalePsychiatric Status Rating ScalesCognitive Behavioral TherapyBiological psychopathologymedicine.diseaseAnxiety DisordersHypochondriasisPsychiatry and Mental healthGeneral psychopathologyTreatment OutcomeRisk FactorsInterview PsychologicalmedicineHumansAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomSomatoform DisordersPsychologyAnxiety disorderClinical psychologyJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease
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Irregular assimilation progress: Reasons for setbacks in the context of linguistic therapy of evaluation

2012

The assimilation model suggests progress in psychotherapy follows an eight-stage sequence described by the Assimilation of Problematic Experiences Scale (APES). This study sought to reconcile this developmental stage model with the common but superficially contradictory clinical observation that therapeutic advances alternate with setbacks. Setbacks (n=466) were identified in therapy transcripts of two clients and classified using a preliminary nine-category list of possible alternative reasons for setbacks. Most of the setbacks involved switches among the multiple strands of a problem due to (a) therapists exceeding clients' therapeutic zone of proximal development, (b) therapists guiding …

AdultMalePsychiatric Status Rating ScalesDevelopmental stageTime FactorsPsychotherapistCognitive Behavioral TherapyZone of proximal developmentMetaphorMental Disordersmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)Professional-Patient RelationsModels PsychologicalYoung AdultClinical PsychologyTreatment OutcomeScale (social sciences)HumansFemalePsychologyProblem Solvingmedia_commonPsychotherapy Research
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Effects of emotional picture viewing on voluntary eye blinks

2014

Eyeblinks, whether reflexive or voluntary, play an important role in protecting our vision. When viewing pictures, reflexive eyeblinks are known to be modulated by the emotional state induced thereby. More specifically, the hedonic valence (unpleasantness-pleasantness) induced by the picture has been shown to have a linear relationship with the amplitude of a startle blink elicited during picture viewing. This effect has been attributed to congruence between an ongoing state and task demands: an unpleasant emotional state is assumed to bias our attention towards potentially harmful stimuli, such as startle tones. However, recent research suggests that the valence-specific modulation may not…

AdultMalePsychological Defense MechanismsEmotionslcsh:MedicineSensory systemElectromyographySocial and Behavioral SciencesAmygdalaYoung AdultPicture viewingmedicineHuman PerformancePsychophysicsHumansPsychologyMotor activityValence (psychology)lcsh:Scienceta515BehaviorMotivationMultidisciplinarymedicine.diagnostic_testBlinkinglcsh:RCognitive PsychologyExperimental PsychologyEmotional modulationmedicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:QFemaleSensory PerceptionPsychologyAttention (Behavior)Photic StimulationMotor cortexCognitive psychologyResearch ArticlePLOS ONE
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Effectiveness of the Cognitive Differentiation Program of the Integrated Psychological Therapy

2011

The aim of the current pilot study was to compare two strategies in the application of the cognitive differentiation program of Integrated Psychological Therapy for people with schizophrenia. Twenty-six outpatients were randomly assigned to the application of the program in group sessions (CDg), or to its application in individualized sessions (CDi). The program provides cognitive exercises to promote better performance in cognition, and both groups of participants completed the same number of exercises following the same number of sessions per week. Outcomes were assessed on neuropsychological measures of attention, executive functioning and everyday memory, and everyday functioning. Effec…

AdultMalePsychological therapyPilot ProjectsNeuropsychological Testslaw.inventionRandomized controlled triallawmedicineHumansSingle-Blind MethodSocial functioningCognitive Behavioral TherapyNeuropsychologyCognitionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthTreatment OutcomeCognitive remediation therapySchizophreniaPsychotherapy GroupFemaleCognition DisordersPsychologyEveryday memoryClinical psychologyJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease
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Therapist competence and therapeutic alliance are important in the treatment of health anxiety (hypochondriasis)

2015

The role of treatment delivery factors (i.e., therapist adherence, therapist competence, and therapeutic alliance) is rarely investigated in psychotherapeutic treatment for health anxiety. This study aimed to investigate the role of the assessment perspective for the evaluation of treatment delivery factors and their relevance for treatment outcome. Therapist adherence, therapist competence, and therapeutic alliance were evaluated by independent raters, therapists, patients, and supervisors in 68 treatments. Patients with severe health anxiety (hypochondriasis) were treated with cognitive therapy or exposure therapy. Treatment outcome was assessed with a standardized interview by independen…

AdultMalePsychotherapistmedicine.medical_treatmentExposure therapyTreatment outcomeImplosive Therapybehavioral disciplines and activitiesProfessional CompetencemedicineHumansCompetence (human resources)Biological PsychiatryCognitive Behavioral TherapyProfessional-Patient RelationsMiddle AgedHypochondriasisPsychiatry and Mental healthTreatment OutcomeAllianceStructured interviewCognitive therapyPatient ComplianceAnxietyFemaleImplosive Therapymedicine.symptomPsychologyhuman activitiesClinical psychologyPsychiatry Research
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Benchmarking of cognitive-behavioral therapy for depression in efficacy and effectiveness studies--how do exclusion criteria affect treatment outcome?

2011

Abstract Objective: Little is known about how exclusion criteria applied in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) affect the transfer of psychotherapy outcome research to naturalistic settings. This study evaluated the effects of naturalistic depression therapies and benchmarked them with published RCTs. Method: Commonly used exclusion criteria were applied to n=338 depressive patients receiving cognitive-behavioral therapy. Outcomes of the resulting subsample eligible for RCTs were compared to those reported in RCTs. Results: Treatment outcomes of the total sample (d=1.16) and the subsample eligible for RCTs (d=1.15) were highly similar. Therapy outcome was worse than in high-quality RCTs (d…

AdultMalePsychotherapistmedicine.medical_treatmentTreatment outcomeAffect (psychology)law.inventionRandomized controlled triallawhealth services administrationmedicineHumansDepression (differential diagnoses)Randomized Controlled Trials as TopicTherapy OutcomeDepressive DisorderCognitive Behavioral TherapyPatient SelectionBenchmarkingCognitive behavioral therapyClinical PsychologyBenchmarkingTreatment OutcomeFemaleDysthymic DisorderPsychologyPsychotherapy research : journal of the Society for Psychotherapy Research
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Factors limiting performance in a multitone intensity-discrimination task: disentangling non-optimal decision weights and increased internal noise.

2013

To identify factors limiting performance in multitone intensity discrimination, we presented sequences of five pure tones alternating in level between loud (85 dB SPL) and soft (30, 55, or 80 dB SPL). In the "overall-intensity task", listeners detected a level increment on all of the five tones. In the "masking task", the level increment was imposed only on the soft tones, rendering the soft tones targets and loud tones task-irrelevant maskers. Decision weights quantifying the importance of the five tone levels for the decision were estimated using methods of molecular psychophysics. Compatible with previous studies, listeners placed higher weights on the loud tones than on the soft tones i…

AdultMaleScienceSocial and Behavioral SciencesYoung AdultPsychophysicsPsychologyHumansStatistical MethodsBiologyBehaviorLikelihood FunctionsPhysicsStatisticsQRClassical MechanicsExperimental PsychologyAcousticsModels TheoreticalSensory SystemsAuditory System150 PsychologieAuditory PerceptionMedicineSensory PerceptionFemaleAttention (Behavior)Noise150 PsychologyPerceptual MaskingMathematicsResearch ArticleNeurosciencePsychoacousticsPLoS ONE
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Induced not just right and incompleteness experiences in OCD patients and non-clinical individuals: An in vivo study

2016

Abstract Background and objectives Research on incompleteness and not-just right experiences, (INC/NJREs) indicate that some OCD symptom dimensions are motivated by these experiences rather than by anxiety. Most published data are correlational, using non-clinical individuals. This study sought to examine INC/NJREs in vivo in non-clinical and OCD individuals. Methods Study 1: Ninety-three undergraduates were randomly assigned to a INC/NJREs induction (n=44) or non-induction task (n=47). Scores on self-reports assessing INC, NJREs, OCD, Anxiety, and Depression were also recorded. Study 2: Twenty adults with OCD performed the induction task and completed the same questionnaire-packet as the n…

AdultMaleSensory phenomenaObsessive-Compulsive Disorder050103 clinical psychologymedicine.medical_specialtyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAnxietybehavioral disciplines and activitiesYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Surveys and Questionnairesmental disordersSensationmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychiatryPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesCognitive Behavioral Therapy05 social scienceshumanities030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyNon clinicalAnxietyFemaleSelf Reportmedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry
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Hypnosis Attitudes: Treatment Effects and Associations With Symptoms in Individuals With Cancer.

2017

Attitudes about hypnosis are associated with hypnotic responsiveness. However, little is known about how hypnosis attitudes change with treatment and if those changes are associated with better outcomes. This study examined whether an intervention based on the Valencia Model of Waking Hypnosis combined with Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy changed attitudes about hypnosis in a sample of patients with a history of cancer. The results indicated that the intervention improved attitudes toward hypnosis, relative to a control intervention, and the improvements remained stable at 3-month follow-up. Analyses also showed that changes in some attitudes were associated with treatment-related improvements…

AdultMaleSleep Wake Disorders050103 clinical psychologyHypnosisHealth Knowledge Attitudes PracticePsychotherapistmedicine.medical_treatmentTreatment outcomePain03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCancer SurvivorsIntervention (counseling)NeoplasmsOutcome Assessment Health CaremedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesDepression (differential diagnoses)FatigueAgedAged 80 and overCognitive Behavioral Therapy05 social sciencesCancerGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseComplementary and alternative medicineCognitive therapyFemalesense organsPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHypnosisClinical psychologyThe American journal of clinical hypnosis
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