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Chapter 13: Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions

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Title: Chapter 13: Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions


1
Chapter 13 Cognitive-Behavioral
Interventions
  • March 6, 2006

2
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
  • Can be used to treat specific disorders or more
    broad issues
  • e.g., bulimia, anxiety, poor study habits

3
Anxiety-Reduction Methods
Perhaps your performance anxiety wouldnt be so
bad if you performed better
4
Systematic Desensitization
  • Wolpe
  • relaxation training
  • hierarchy of fears
  • step by step progression up hierarchy of fears

5
Graduated Real-Life Practice
  • Meyer
  • a.k.a. successive approximation, graded practice
  • step by step progression along hierarchy, facing
    stimuli without relaxation

6
Both systematic desensitization and graduated
real-life practice are based on the principle
of...
7
Stimulus Generalization
  • If you extinguish anxiety by exposing the client
    to a stimulus that resembles the phobic stimulus,
    but is less intense, then eventually anxiety will
    extinguish when the phobic stimulus is present

8
Imaginal Flooding
  • Formerly implosive therapy (but now doesnt
    include psychodynamic material)
  • Imagine the most feared stimulus to invoke
    intense anxiety and continue until anxiety
    decreases

9
Exposure in Vivo
  • Marks
  • Real-life exposure to the feared stimulus
  • Evoking stimulus (ES) the feared situation
  • Evoked response (ER) the behaviour that the ES
    initiates

10
Operant Learning Techniques
I think I should warn you that the flip side of
our generous bonus-incentive program is capital
punishment.
11
Reinforcement
  • Strengthen or maintain a behaviour
  • Positive
  • delivery of something
  • immediate small more effective than delayed large
  • Negative
  • removal of something aversive

12
Shaping
  • A.k.a. successive approximation
  • Break learning into small steps
  • Reinforce small steps that get closer and closer
    to the desired behaviour

13
Punishment
  • decrease or stop behaviours
  • response-contingent aversive stimulation (RCAS)
  • response aversive stimulus

14
Punishment
  • Response cost
  • response removal of appetitive stimulus

15
Effect on Behaviour
Behaviour Increases
Behaviour Decreases
Stimulus is Presented
Positive Reinforcement
Punishment RCAS
Scheduled Consequence of the Response
Punishment Response Cost
Negative Reinforcement
Stimulus is Withdrawn
16
Extinction
  • Disconnecting a reinforcement contingency

17
Schedules of Reinforcement
  • Continuous
  • every response is reinforced
  • rapid extinction
  • Variable Ratio
  • some responses reinforced in an unpredictable
    pattern
  • delayed extinction

18
What Controls Behaviour?
  • Rule-governed behaviour
  • rules, laws
  • affect how a behaviour is performed
  • Contingency-shaped behaviour
  • response rates, likelihood behavior will be
    performed

19
Applied Behaviour Analysis
  • The application of operant learning principles to
    treat problem behaviors
  • Used to help many types of problems with good
    success rate

20
The ABCs
  • Must identify the contingency that is operating
    and maintaining the problem behaviour
  • A antecedent events
  • B behaviour
  • C consequences

21
Class Activity
  • Quickly try to think of a behaviour in your life
    that you would like to change. Discuss the ABCs
    with someone near you.

22
Other Applications
  • toilet training
  • outbursts
  • somatoform disorders
  • schizophrenia
  • stimulus satiation responses typically weaken
    when the reinforcing stimulus is made too
    abundant

23
Token Economies
  • Used with groups (e.g., psychiatric or rehab
    facilities)
  • give out tokens that can later be exchanged for
    tangible rewards or privileges
  • A form of secondary reinforcement

24
Types of Reinforcers
  • Secondary reinforcers are not inherently
    reinforcing, but through association,one learns
    that they are reinforcing
  • e.g., money, grades, smiling
  • Primary reinforcers are inherently reinforcing
  • e.g., food, sex

25
Social Skills Training
  • instruction
  • modeling
  • behaviour rehearsal
  • praise
  • prompts
  • coaching
  • feedback
  • reinforcement
  • homework assignments

26
Social Skills Training
  • Generally, best for those who are in the
    community or are likely to be discharged
  • key is a combination of modeling with
    role-playing aimed at specific skills (e.g.,
    expressing feelings, starting a conversation)

27
Rehearsal Desensitization
  • used when social anxiety is also present
  • incorporates systematic desensitization elements
  • move through hierarchy from low anxiety to high
    anxiety items

28
Problem-Solving Therapy
  • Siegel Spivack
  • Training exercises dealing with problem
    identification, goal definition, solution
    evaluation, evaluation of alternatives, and
    selection of the best solution
  • e.g., identifying emotions in others, perspective
    taking

29
Cognitive Modification Procedures
My back is fine. My mind went out
30
Self-Instructional Training
  • Meichenbaum
  • Teaching patients to use self-guiding speech

31
Stress-Inoculation Training
  • Educational phase learn that unhelpful thinking
    patterns produce and maintain unpleasant emotions
    and dysfunctional behviours
  • Rehearsal phase patient makes coping
    self-statements to help deal with stressful
    events
  • Application phase practice using coping skills
    while confronting actual stressors

32
Constructive Narrative
  • clients viewed as storytellers and makers of
    meaning
  • clients can reframe stressful events, normalize
    their experience, develop a healing theory of
    what happened, and build new assumptive worlds
    and ways to view themselves

33
Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy
  • Ellis
  • enable people to observe, understand, and
    persistently dispute irrational, grandiose,
    perfectionist shoulds, oughts and musts

34
ABCs
  • A activating event
  • B beliefs
  • C consequence (emotional)
  • most believe A causes C
  • goal is to accept that B is very important in
    causing C
  • rational vs irrational beliefs

35
ABC and D
  • D disrupting irrational beliefs
  • challenge unrealistic and damaging beliefs
  • e.g., Why is it terrible if things do not go
    your way?

36
Cognitive Therapy
  • Beck
  • challenge irrational beliefs
  • and encourage client to attempt real life
    experiments to challenge faulty assumptions
  • 3 fundamental concepts

37
1. The Cognitive Triad
  • Depressed people have pessimistic thoughts about
    their
  • self
  • world
  • future

38
2. Cognitive Schemas
  • Global, absolute beliefs
  • are activated during depressive episodes, and lie
    dormant between episodes
  • established early in life

39
3. Cognitive Distortions
  • Specific exaggerations of the negative aspects of
    a situation

40
Do certain thinking patterns correlate with
certain mood states?
41
The Situational Self-Statement and Affective
State Inventory
  • Imagine that you had studied really hard for
    your midterm and expected to get an A. However,
    when the marks came back, your mark was a C

42
  • What feelings would you likely experience?
  • A) Depression
  • B) Disappointment
  • C) Anger
  • What thoughts would likely cross your mind?
  • A) I should drop out of school
  • B) It was an unfair exam
  • C) I wish I had done better

43
Cognitive Restructuring
  • Lazarus
  • multimodal therapy model
  • BASIC ID
  • behavior
  • affect
  • sensation
  • imagery
  • cognition
  • interpersonal relations
  • drugs/diet

44
Cognitive Restructuring
  • Corrective self-talk
  • point out errors in form and content thinking
  • ignorance/misinformation

45
Coping and Problem Solving
  • Goldfried
  • general problem solving strategies and coping
    skills
  • 4 areas of focus
  • problem solving
  • relaxation
  • cognitive restructuring
  • communication skills

46
Key Names
  • Beck
  • Lazarus
  • Meichebaum
  • Ellis
  • Goldfried
  • Wolpe
  • Meyer

47
Summary- Key Concepts
  • Anxiety Reduction Methods
  • systematic desensitization, graduated real-life
    practice, imaginal flooding, exposure in vivo
  • Operant Learning Techniques
  • reinforcement, punishment,applied behavior
    analysis, token economies, social skills
    training, problem solving
  • Cognitive Modification Procedures
  • self-instructional training, stress-inoculation
    training, rational-emotive behavior therapy,
    cognitive therapy, coping and problem solving

48
  • Thanks!!
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