Title: Psychological Therapies
1Psychological Therapies
2Psychotherapy
- An interaction between a trained therapist and
someone suffering from psychological difficulties.
3Eclectic Approach
- The most popular form of therapy- it is basically
a smorgasbord where the therapist combines
techniques from different schools of psychology.
4Psychoanalysis
- Freud used free association, hypnosis and dream
interpretation to gain insight into the clients
unconscious.
5Psychoanalytic Methods
- Psychotherapists use their techniques to overcome
resistance by the client.
- The psychoanalyst wants you to become aware of
the resistance and together interpret (ex. Latent
content) its underlying meaning.
6Transference
- In psychoanalysis, the patients transfer to the
analyst of emotions linked with other
relationships.
7Humanistic Therapy
- Focuses of peoples potential for
self-fulfillment (self-actualization).
- Focus on the present and future (not the past).
- Focus on conscious thoughts (not unconscious
ones).
- Take responsibility for you actions- instead of
blaming childhood anxieties.
8Client (Person) Centered Therapy
Most widely used Humanistic technique is
- Therapist should use genuineness, acceptance and
empathy to show unconditional positive regard
towards their clients.
9Active Listening
- Central to Rogers client-centered therapy
- Empathetic listening where the listener echoes,
restates and clarifies. - Can be verbal or nonverbal.
- The counselor interrupts only to confirm or
accept the clients feelings or seek
clarification.
10Behavior Therapies
- Therapy that applies learning principles to the
elimination of unwanted behaviors.
- The behaviors are the problems- so we must change
the behaviors.
11Classical Conditioning Techniques
- Counterconditioning
- A behavioral therapy that conditions new
responses to stimuli that trigger unwanted
behaviors.
Two Types exposure therapies and aversive
conditioning therapies.
12- Exposure therapies expose people to what they
normally avoid. - A type of counterconditioning that associates a
pleasant relaxed state with gradually increasing
anxiety-triggering stimuli is called systematic
desensitization. - Using progressive relaxation, the therapist
trains you to relax one muscle group at a time
until you achieve a drowsy state of complete
relaxation.
13- Then the therapist asks you to imagine (with your
eyes closed) a mildly anxiety-arousing situation.
- If imagining the scene causes you to feel any
anxiety, you signal the therapist, possibly with
a raised finger, and the therapist will instruct
you to switch off of the scene and go back to
relaxation. - This is repeated until scene causes no anxiety.
14Virtual Technology Exposure Therapy
15- Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy allows you to
wear a head-mounted display unit that projects a
three-dimensional virtual world. - This helps to recreate situations that are too
expensive or difficult to re-create, such as fear
of flying.
16Aversive Conditioning
- A type of counterconditioning that associates an
unpleasant state with an unwanted behavior.
How would putting green slime on the fingernails
of a nail biter effect their behavior?
17Aversive Conditioning
18Aversive Conditioning
- What are some ways you can change the behaviors
of your friends with aversive conditioning?
19Operant Conditioning
- Behavior Modification is used in this method
- Token Economy an operant conditioning procedure
that rewards a desired behavior.
A person exchanges a token of some sort, earned
for exhibiting the desired behavior, for various
privileges or treats.
20Cognitive Therapy
21Cognitive Therapies
- A therapy that teaches people new, more adaptive
ways of thinking and acting based on the
assumptions that thoughts intervene between
events and our emotional reactions. Our thinking
colors our feelings, in other words.
22Cognitive Therapy
- Cognitive Therapists try to teach people new,
more constructive ways of thinking.
Is .300 a good or bad batting average?
23Cognitive Therapy
24Aaron Beck and his view of Depression
- Noticed that depressed people were similar in the
way they viewed the world. - Used cognitive therapy get people to take off the
dark sunglasses in which they view their
surroundings
25Cognitive Therapy- Does It Work?
26- Depressed people normally do not exhibit the
self-serving bias that is common in non-depressed
people. They often attribute their failures to
themselves and attribute their successes to
external circumstances. - Those who are trained to reform negative patterns
of thinking and labeling can improve their
depression.
27Group Therapies
28- Group therapy does not provide the same degree of
therapist involvement with each client however,
it saves therapists time and clients money. It
is often no less effective than individual
therapy. - The social context allows people both to discover
that others have problems similar to their own
and to receive feedback as they try out new ways
of behaving.
29- Family Therapy assumes that we live and grow in
relation to others, especially our family. We
struggle to differentiate ourselves within our
family, but we also need to connect with them
emotionally. - A wide range of people participate in self-help
and support groups. Most of these focus on
stigmas or hard-to-discuss illnesses such as AIDS.
30- Clients may tend to overestimate the
effectiveness of their psychotherapy for a
variety of reasons which may include - 1. People often enter therapy while in crisis.
- 2. Clients need to believe the therapy was worth
the effort. - 3. Clients generally speak kindly of their
therapists.