Title: PSY 245 CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY II
1PSY 245CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY II
- Assoc. Prof. Dr. BAHAR BASTUG
- Clinical Psychologist
2Behavioral Theory and Therapy
3- This weeks focus is on behavioral theory and
therapy. - We should all put our science caps on. ?
4- Behaviorism and its application, behavior therapy
are linked to the science within academic
psychology. Behaviorism and behavior therapy
sprang from scientific efforts to describe,
explain, predict and control observable animal
and human behavior.
5- Behaviorism and psychoanalysis are opposite each
other in some ways, and similar in some ways. - The biggest difference between behaviorism and
psychoanalysis is - Psychoanalysis subjectively focuses on inner
dynamic or mental concepts. Behaviorism
objectively focuses on observable phenomena or
materialistic concepts. -
6- Psychoanalysis use techniques derived from
clinical practice. - Behaviorism use techniques derived from
scientific research.
7- Both approaches are highly deterministic,
positivistic and mechanistic perspectives to
understanding human. - Michael Mahoney referred to psychoanalysis and
behaviorism as the yin and yang of determinism
(1984).
8- They are often considered reactions to
unscientific psychoanalytic approaches.
9- For the behaviorist, all behavior is LEARNED. The
most complex human behaviors are explained,
controlled, and modified through LEARNING
PROCEDURES.
10HISTORICAL CONTEXT
- Three major historical stages in the contemporary
behavioral approaches - Behaviorism as a scientific attempt
- Behavior therapy
- Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT)
11HISTORICAL CONTEXT
- Existential-humanistic psychology is called the
third force. As a third force, existential-humanis
tic psy is an alternative to psychoanalysis and
behaviorism. Why does this behavior therapy
chapter come after the existential- humanistic
chapters?
12- Although behaviorism began gaining popularity in
the early 1900s, behavior therapy was not
identified until the 1950s. Applied behavior
therapy came later.
13Behaviorism
- In the early 1900s, a new and different
mechanistic view of humans, behaviorism, was in
contrast to other perspectives. Most early 20th
century psychologists were interested in human
consciousness and free will, and used a procedure
called introspection to identify the inner
workings of the human mind. - Behaviorists excluded consciousness and
introspection. They believed in determinism
rather than free will.
14John Watson (1878-1958)
15- Prior to Watson, William James, identified
himself as a philosopher, claimed that psy is no
science, only the hope of a science.
16Father of behaviorism
- Watson believed in psychological science. He was
interested in experimental psy, the classical
conditioning learning model as demonstrated by
Pavlovs dogs. -
- For Watson, behaviorism was far beyond the hope
of a science. He published behaviorist manifesto
in 1913, and redefined psychology as a pure
science. - Psy as a behaviorist views it is a purely
objective branch of natural science.
17- He was elected to the presidency of the APA in
1915, at the age of 35.
18- In opposition to Jamess free will, the purpose
of Watsons behaviorism was the deterministic
prediction and control of human behavior. Watson
viewed humans and animals as indistinguishable. -
19- Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed,
and my own specified world to bring them up in
and Ill guarantee to take any one at random and
train him to become any type of specialist I
might selectdoctor, lawyer, artist,
merchant-chief and yes, even beggar-man and
thief, regardless of his talents, tendencies,
abilities, vocations, and race.
20- Watson had a strong interest in the application
of behavioral scientific principles to human
suffering. This may have been because he
experienced a nervous breakdown as a young man
and had not found psychoanalysis helpful.
21Little Hans and Little Albert
- In 1909, Freud reported an analysis of Little
Hans (5-year-old) who was afraid of being bitten
by a horse because of unresolved Oedipal issues
and castration anxiety. - Freud explained that Little Hanss phobia was
from castration anxiety. - Watson showed that Little Albert could develop a
phobia from classical conditioning.
22- Watson sought to demonstrate that severe fears
and phobias were caused not by psychoanalytic
constructs but by classical conditioning of a
fear response. In his famous experiments with
11-month-old Little Albert, after only five
trials in which Watson and his assistant Rosalie
Raynor paired the presentation of a white rat to
Albert with the striking of a metal bar. Albert
developed a strong fear and aversion to white
rats.
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25- His conditioned fear response generalized to a
variety furry white objects, such as a dog,
cotton wool and Santa Claus mask.
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28Little Peter MARY COVER JONES
- Jones showed that fear could be extinguished
through counterconditioning and/or social
imitation.
29Little Peter
- In 1924, Mary Cover Jones, who was student of
Watson, conducted an investigation of the
effectiveness of counter-conditioning or
deconditioning with a 3-year-old boy named Little
Peter. It was study that illustrated the
potential of classical conditioning techniques in
the treatment of psychological fears and phobias.
30- Prior to his involvement in the behavioral
experiments, Little Peter exhibited fear in
response to several furry objects, including
rabbits, fur coats, and cotton balls. Jones
proceeded to systematically decondition Little
Peters fear reaction by pairing the gradual
approach of a caged rabbit with Peters
involvement in an enjoyable activityeating his
favorite foods. In the end, Peters fear response
was extinguished.
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32Early behaviorists made many important
contributions to psychology
- The discovery by Pavlov, Watson, and their
colleagues that emotional responses could be
involuntarily conditioned in animals and humans
via classical conditioning procedures. - The discovery by Mary Cover Jones that fear
responses could be deconditioned by either (1)
replacing the fear response with a positive
response or (2) social imitation. - The discovery by Thorndike and its later
elaboration by Skinner that animal and human
behaviors are powerfully shaped by their
consequences.
33Behavior Therapy
- In the 1950s, three different groups in three
different countries independently introduced the
term behavior therapy to modern psy - 1. B. F. Skinner in the United States
- 2. Joseph Wolpe, Arnold Lazarus, and Stanley
Rachman in South Africa - 3. Hans Eysenck and the Maudsley Group in the
United Kingdom
34B. F. Skinner in the United States
35Skinner (1904-1990)
- His early work was an experimental project on
operant conditioning with rats and pigeons in the
1930s. He demonstrated the power of positive
reinforcement, negative reinforcement,
punishment, and stimulus control in the
modification of animal behavior. Within the
confines of Skinner box, he was able to teach
pigeons to play ping-pong via operant
conditioning procedures.
36Skinner
- In the 1940s, he began extending operant
conditioning concepts to human social and
clinical problems. His book Walden Two was a
story of how operant conditioning procedures
could be used to create an utopian society. His
next book, Science and Human Behavior, was a
critique of psychoanalytic concepts and a
reformulation of psychotherapy in behavioral
terms. - In 1953, Skinner and his colleagues first used
behavior therapy referring to the application of
operant conditioning procedures to modify the
behavior of psychotic patients.
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39Joseph Wolpe, Arnold Lazarus, and Stanley Rachman
in South Africa
- Joseph Wolpe was interested in conditioning
procedures as a means for resolving neurotic
fear. He established the first nonpsychoanalytic,
empirically validated behavior therapy technique.
His book Psychotherapy by Reciprocal Inhibition
outlined the therapeutic procedure now called
systematic desensitization. - Wolpes approach is very similar to Joness
counterconditioning principle wherein a
conditioned negative emotional response is
replaced with a conditioned positive emotional
response.
40- Wolpes work attracted the attention of two South
African psychologists, Arnold Lazarus and Stanley
Rachman. - Conditioning procedures were used as a means for
resolving neurotic fear. - A conditioned negative emotional response is
replaced with a conditioned positive emotional
response.
41- Lazarus advocated the integration of
laboratory-based scientific procedures into
existing clinical and counseling practices. He
used the term behavior therapy in a journal. - Rachman has influenced developing behavior
therapy procedures. His contribution involved the
application of aversive stimuli to treating
neurotic behavior, including addictions.
42Hans Eysenck and the Maudsley Group in the United
Kingdom
- British psychiatrist Hans Eysenck used the term
behaviour therapy to describe the application
of modern learning theory to the understanding
and treatment of behavioral and psychiatric
problems.
43- Conclusion,
- All these researchers lead to born behavioir
therapy.
44Cognitive Behavior Modification
- Contemporary behavior therapy now includes
cognitive variables. Most behavior therapists now
work with cognition. - Many articles focus on thoughts, expectations,
and emotions. Behavior therapy is no longer a
process that focuses on external behavior. - Behavior therapy continues to develop.
45THEORETICAL PRINCIPLES
- Two primary principles characterize behaviorists
and behavioral theory - Behavior therapists employ techniques based on
modern learning theory. - Behavior therapists employ techniques derived
from scientific research.
46Theoretical Models
- The four main models of learning form the
theoretical foundation of behavior therapy. - Operant Conditioning Applied Behavior Analysis
- Classical Conditioning Neobehavioristic,
Mediational Stimulus-Response Model
47Operant Conditioning Applied Behavior Analysis
- B. F. Skinner
- Applied behavior analysis is a clinical term
referring to a behavioral approach based on
operant conditioning principles. - The operant conditioning position is
straightforward Behavior is a function of its
consequences. - Operant conditioning is a stimulus-response
theory.
48Applied Behavior Analysis
- Applied behavior analysis is a clinical term,
based on Skinners operant conditioning
principles. Behavior is a function of its
consequences. - Operant refers to how behaviors operate on the
environment, thereby producing specific
consequences.
49Applied Behavior Analysis
- Operant conditioning is a stimulus-response (SR)
theory. Applied behavior analysis focuses on
observable behaviors. Therapy proceeds through
the manipulation of environmental variables to
produce behavior change.
50Applied Behavior Analysis
- The main procedures are reinforcement,
punishment, extinction, and stimulus control.
These procedures are used to manipulate the
environmental contingencies (rewards and
punishments). The goal is to increase adaptive
behavior through reinforcement and stimulus
control and to reduce maladaptive behavior
through punishment and extinction. - Several behavior therapy techniques, such as
assertiveness training, the token economy, and
problem-solving training are derived from applied
behavior analysis.
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53Classical Conditioning Neobehavioristic,
Mediational Stimulus-Response Model
- The neobehavioristic mediational SR model is
based on classical conditioning principles. Its
principles were developed and articulated by
Pavlov, Watson, and Wolpe. - Classical conditioning is sometimes referred to
as associational learning because it involves an
association of one environmental stimulus with
another.
54Classical Conditioning Neobehavioristic,
Mediational Stimulus-Response Model
- In Pavlovian terms, an unconditioned stimulus is
one that naturally produces a specific
physical-emotional response. The physical
response elicited by an unconditioned stimulus is
mediated through smooth muscle reflex arcs, so
higher-order cognitive processes are not required
in order for conditioning to occur.
55Classical Conditioning Neobehavioristic,
Mediational Stimulus-Response Model
- The experience of being struck from behind while
waiting for a red light is the unconditioned
stimulus. This stimulus automatically (or
autonomically) produces a reflexive fear response
(or unconditioned response). After only a single,
powerful experience, the 34-year-old man suffers
from a debilitating fear of impending death (a
conditioned response) whenever he is exposed to
the interior of an automobile (a conditioned
stimulus).
56Classical Conditioning Neobehavioristic,
Mediational Stimulus-Response Model
- As Wolpe emphasizes, this scenario represents
classical autonomic conditioning or learning
because the man has no cognitive expectations or
cognitive triggers that lead to his experience of
fear when he is sitting inside an automobile.
Because of the lack of cognitive processing
involved in classical conditioning, when an
individual experiences a purely classically
conditioned fear response, often he or she will
say something like, I dont know why it is, but
Im just afraid of elevators.
57Classical Conditioning Neobehavioristic,
Mediational Stimulus-Response Model
- Classical conditioning principles include
- stimulus generalization,
- stimulus discrimination,
- extinction,
- counter-conditioning, and
- spontaneous recovery.
58- Classical conditioning principles
- Stimulus generalization the generalization of a
conditioned fear response to new settings,
situations, or objects. - In the case of Little Albert, stimulus
generalization occurred when Albert experienced
fear in response to stimuli similar in appearance
to white rats (e.g., Santa Claus masks, cotton
balls, etc.). - .
59Classical conditioning principles
- Stimulus discrimination occurs when a conditioned
fear response is not elicited by a new or
different stimulus. - In the case of Little Albert, stimulus
discrimination occurred when Little Albert did
not have a fear response when exposed to a fluffy
white washrag.
60- Classical conditioning principles
- Extinction the gradual elimination of a
conditioned response. It occurs when a
conditioned stimulus is repeatedly presented
without a previously associated unconditioned
stimulus. - If Watson had kept working with Little Albert and
repeatedly exposed him to a white rat without a
frightening sound of metal clanging, Little
Albert would lose his conditioned response to
rats. - Extinction is not the same as forgetting.
61Classical conditioning principles
- Counter-conditioning.New associative learning.
- Mary Cover Joness work with Little Peter is an
example of successful counter-conditioning or
deconditioning. Counter-conditioning involves new
associative learning. The subject learns that the
conditioned stimulus brings with it a positive
emotional experience. - When Jones repeatedly presented the white rat to
Little Peter while he was eating some of his
favorite foods, eventually the conditioned
response (fear) was counter-conditioned.
62Classical conditioning principles
- Spontaneous recovery occurs when an old response
suddenly returns after having been successfully
extinguished or counterconditioned. - If, after successful counter-conditioning through
systematic desensitization, Wolpes client
suddenly begins having fear symptoms associated
with the interior of automobiles, he has
experienced spontaneous recovery.
63Theory of Psychopathology
- MALADAPTIVE BEHAVIOR IS LEARNED AND CAN ALWAYS BE
EITHER UNLEARNED OR REPLACED BY NEW LEARNING. - PSYCHOPATHOLOGY MAY BE A FUNCTION OF INADEQUATE
LEARNING OR SKILL DEFICITS.
64Theory of Psychopathology
- An underlying principle of assertiveness training
is that individuals who exhibit too much passive
or too much aggressive behavior simply have skill
deficits they havent learned how to
appropriately use assertive behavior in social
situations. The purpose of assertiveness training
is to teach clients assertiveness skills through
modeling, coaching, behavior rehearsal, and
reinforcement.
65Theory of Psychopathology
- Behaviorists systematically apply following
scientific methods - Observe and assess client maladaptive behaviors.
- Develop hypotheses about the cause,
- Test behavioral hypotheses through the
application of empirically justifiable
interventions. - Observe and evaluate the results of their
intervention. - Revise and continue testing new hypotheses as
needed.
66THE PRACTICE OF BEHAVIOR THERAPY
- To practice behavior therapy requires that you
take notes and think like a scientist. You are a
teacher. Your job is to help clients unlearn old
maladaptive behaviors and learn new, adaptive
behaviors.
67What Is Contemporary Behavior Therapy?
- Nearly all cognitive therapies are used in
conjunction with behavior therapies. - There are now several new-generation
cognitive-behavioral therapies. These therapies
include - Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
- Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR)
68Assessment Issues and Procedures
- Behavior therapists would be able to directly
OBSERVE clients in their natural environment to
obtain specific information about what happens
before, during, and after adaptive and
maladaptive behaviors occur. - The main goal of behavioral assessment is to
determine the external (environmental or
situational) stimuli and internal (physiological
and cognitive) stimuli that directly precede and
follow adaptive and maladaptive client behavioral
responses. Both internal and external stimuli may
be of interest.
69Assessment Issues and Procedures
- Functional Behavior Analysis (FBA) This
assessment procedure is sometimes referred to as
obtaining information about the clients
behavioral ABCs - A The behaviors antecedents (everything that
happens just BEFORE the maladaptive behavior is
observed) - B The behavior operant definition by
concrete terms - C The behaviors consequences (everything
that happens just AFTER the maladaptive behavior
occurs)
70Assessment Issues and Procedures
- Through direct observation, the behavior
therapist gathers information. - But, direct behavioral observation is
inefficient, for several reasons - 1. Most therapists cant afford the time required
to observe clients in their natural settings. - 2. Many clients object to having their therapist
come into their home or workplace to conduct a
formal observation.
71Assessment Issues and Procedures
- 3. Even if the client agreed to have the
therapist come perform an observation, the
therapists presence influences the clients
behavior. - Because behavior therapists usually cannot use
direct behavioral observation, they employ a
variety of less direct data collection procedures.
72The Behavioral Interview
- The clinical or behavioral interview is the most
common assessment procedure. During interviews,
behavior therapists directly observe client
behavior, inquire about behavioral antecedents
and consequences, and operationalize the targets
of therapy. The operational definition or
specific, measurable characteristics of client
symptoms and goals are crucial behavioral
assessment components.
73- Defining the clients problem(s) in behavioral
terms is the first step in a behavioral
assessment interview. Behavior therapists are not
satisfied when clients describe themselves as
depressed or anxious. Instead, behaviorists
seek concrete, specific behavioral information.
74The Clinical or Behavioral Interview
- Despite many practical advantages of behavioral
interviews, this assessment procedure also has
several disadvantages - (1) low interrater reliability,
- (2) lack of interviewer objectivity, and
- (3) frequent inconsistency between behavior in a
clinical interview and behavior outside therapy. - (4) false, subjective clients report.
75The Clinical or Behavioral Interview
- Behavior therapists compensate for the
inconsistent and subjective nature of interviews
through two strategies - They employ structured or diagnostic interviews
such as the Structured Clinical Interview for the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, fourth edition (SCID-DSM-IV). - They use additional assessment methods beyond
interviewing procedures.
76Self-Monitoring
- Sometimes, to directly observe client behavior
outside therapy is impractical. Clients are
trained to monitor their own behavior. In CBT,
clients frequently keep thought or emotion logs
that include at least three components - disturbing emotional states,
- the exact behavior engaged in at the time of the
emotional state, and - thoughts that occurred when the emotions emerged.
77- Advantages of selfmonitoring is cheap, practical,
and usually therapeutic. - Disadvantages of selfmonitoring is that the
client can collect inadequate or inaccurate
information, or resist collecting any
information. Clients may not make accurate
recordings of their behavior.
78Standardized Questionnaires
- Objective psychological measures include
standardized administration and scoring.
Behaviorists prefer instruments that have
established reliability and validity. - These are often used to determine outcomes.
-
79Operant Conditioning and Variants
- In the tradition of Skinner and applied behavior
analysis, the application of behaviorism to
therapy is direct operant conditioning. Skinners
emphasis is on environmental manipulation rather
than processes of mind or cognition.
80Contingency Management and Token Economies
- Using operant conditioning requires an analysis
of behavioral consequences in the clients
physical and social environment. This process is
contingency management. Its used more common in
educational, family, institutional and drug
treatment settings.
81Contingency Management and Token Economies
- An appropriate use of operant conditioning
involves several systematic steps - 1. The parents need to operationalize the target
- behaviors and identify behavioral objectives.
- 2. The therapist helped the parents develop a
system - for measuring the target behaviors. They were
each - given a pencil and notebook to follow the
frequency - of their teens behaviors.
- 3. The parents were instructed on how to monitor
and evaluate the effects of their new contingency
schedule.
82Contingency Management and Token Economies
- Operant conditioning principles have been applied
to educational and institutional settings.
Following Skinners work aimed at modifying the
behavior of psychotic patients, operant
conditioning within institutions has come to be
known as a TOKEN ECONOMY. - Within token economy systems, individuals are
givencoins or symbolic rewards for positive or
desirable behaviors. These tokens are used like
money, to obtain goods or privileges.
83Contingency Management and Token Economies
- Token economies have been criticized as forcible
and as not having lasting effects that generalize
to the world outside the institution. After the
desirable behavior patterns are well established,
the behavioral contingencies would be slowly
decreased. This procedure is referred to as
fading and is designed to maximize the likelihood
of generalization of learning from one setting to
another. The desired outcome occurs when the
subject internalizes the contingency system.
84Contingency Management and Token Economies
- Positive reinforcement faces some criticism.
- Thorndike, Skinner concluded that punishment led
to behavioral supression, but it wasnt effective
for controlling behavior. - Then, Solomon claimed that punishment could
generate new, learned behavior.
85Contingency Management and Token Economies
- Now, it is accepted that punishment is a powerful
behavior modifier, but it has disadvantage. - In the attachment and trauma literature,
excessive punishment leads to trauma bonding. - There is a debate on using punishment as a
learning tool.
86Contingency Management and Token Economies
- The direct application of punishment, or aversive
conditioning, is used to reduce undesirable and
maladaptive behavior. It has been applied with
some success to smoking cessation, repetitive
self-injurious behavior, alcohol abuse or
dependency, and sexual deviation.
87Behavioral Activation (BA)
- For Skinner, depr was caused by an interruption
of healthy behavioral activities. - Depressed individuals engage in fewer pleasant
activities and obtain less positive reinforcement
than others. So, if they change their behavior,
they may improve or recover.
88Behavioral Activation (BA)
- BA was previously referred to as activity
scheduling and used as a component of various
cognitive and behavioral treatments for
depression. - Recent research suggests BA may be as good as the
whole CBT package for depressive disorders.
89Relaxation Training
- Edmund Jacobson was the first scientist to write
about relaxation training as a treatment
procedure. Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR)
was initially based on the assumption that
muscular tension is an underlying cause of a
variety of mental and emotional problems.
90Relaxation Training
- PMR is an evidence-based treatment.
- But PMR can make some clients more anxious.
91Systematic Desensitization and Other
Exposure-Based Treatments
- Joseph Wolpe introduced systematic
desensitization as a technique. -
- Systematic desensitization Jones
deconditioning approach Jacobsons PMR
procedure. - To be relaxed is the direct physiological
opposite of being excited or disturbed.
(Jacobson, 1978, p. viii)
92Systematic Desensitization and Other
Exposure-Based Treatments
- After clients are trained in PMR techniques, they
build a fear hierarchy in collaboration with the
therapist. Systematic desensitization usually
proceeds in the following way - 1.The client identifies a range of various
fear-inducing situations or objects.
93- Systematic Desensitization and Other
Exposure-Based Treatments - 2. Using a measuring system referred to as
subjective units of distress, the client, with
the support of the therapist, rates each
fear-inducing situation or object on a scale from
0 to 100 (0 no distress 100 total distress). - 3. Early in the session the client engages in
PMR. - 4. While deeply relaxed, the client is exposed,
in vivo or through imagery, to the least feared
item in the fear hierarchy.
94Systematic Desensitization and Other
Exposure-Based Treatments
- 5. The client is exposed to each feared item,
gradually progressing to the most feared item in
the hierarchy. - 6. If the client experiences anxiety at any point
during the imaginal or in vivo exposure process,
the client reengages in PMR until relaxation
overcomes anxiety. - 7.Treatment continues systematically until the
client achieves relaxation competence while
simultaneously being exposed to the entire range
of fear hierarchy.
95Imaginal or In Vivo Exposure and Desensitization
- Systematic desensitization is an exposure
treatment. In the exposure treatments, clients
are treated by exposure to the thing they want to
avoid the stimulus that evokes intense fear,
anxiety, or painful emotions.
96Imaginal or In Vivo Exposure and Desensitization
- There are three ways in which clients are exposed
to their fears during systematic desensitization - 1. Exposure to fears can be accomplished through
mental imagery. Computer simulation (virtual
reality) has been used in therapists office. - 2. In vivo exposure to feared stimuli. In vivo
exposure involves direct exposure to real-life
situations.
97- 3. computer simulation (virtual reality) has been
used as a means of exposing clients to feared
stimuli. - Psychoeducation and a good therapeutic alliance
are essential for exposure.
98Massed (Intensive) or Spaced (Graduated) Exposure
Sessions
- Is desensitization more effective when clients
are exposed to feared stimuli during a single
prolonged session or when they are slowly exposed
to feared stimuli during a series of shorter
sessions? - Either approach can be used effectively.
99Virtual Reality Exposure (VRE)
- a procedure wherein clients are immersed in a
real-time computer-generated computer
environment. It has been empirically evaluated as
an alternative to imaginal or in vivo exposure in
cases of acrophobia (fear of heights), flight
phobia, and spider phobia. - VRE has been empirically validated.
-
100Interoceptive Exposure
- It is similar to other exposure techniques but
focuses on internal anxiety signals or triggers. - Research on Panic Disorder has showed that some
clients who experience intense fear are
responding less to situational stimuli and more
to internal physical sensations.
101Interoceptive Exposure
- Panic-prone individuals are sensitive to internal
physical cues (e.g., increased heart rate,
increased respiration). They interpret those
sensations as signs of physical illness, death,
or loss of consciousness. - Although specific cognitive techniques have been
developed to treat clients tendencies to
catastrophically overinterpret bodily sensations,
interoceptive exposure has been developed to help
clients learn, through exposure and practice, to
deal more effectively with the physical aspects
of intense anxiety or panic.
102Interoceptive Exposure
- Six introceptive exposures that trigger anxiety
- Hyperventilation
- Breath holding
- Breathing through a straw
- Spinning in circles
- Shaking head
- Chest breathing
103Interoceptive Exposure
- Before interoceptive exposure, the client receive
education about body sensations, learn relaxation
techniques, and learn cognitive restructuring
skills. Through repeated successful exposure, the
client becomes desensitized to feared physical
cues.
104Response Prevention and Ritual Prevention
- According to Mowrer, when a client avoids a
feared or distressing situation or stimulus, the
maladaptive avoidance behavior is negatively
reinforced. - For example, clients with Bulimia Nervosa who
purge after eating specific forbidden foods are
relieving themselves from the anxiety and
discomfort they experience upon ingesting the
foods. Purging behavior is negatively reinforced. - Similarly, when a phobic client escapes from a
phobic object or situation, or when a client with
OCD engages in a repeated washing or checking
behavior, negative reinforcement of maladaptive
behavior occurs.
105Response Prevention and Ritual Prevention
- With the therapists assistance, the client with
bulimia is prevented from vomiting after
ingesting a forbidden cookie, the agoraphobic
client is prevented from fleeing a public place
when anxiety begins to mount, and the client with
OCD is prevented from washing hands following
exposure to a contaminated object.
106Participant Modeling
- Social learning principles have been evaluated
for anxiety treatment. - For example, individuals with airplane or flight
phobias dont find it helpful when they watch
other passengers getting on a plane without
experiencing distress. In fact, such observations
can produce increased hopelessness. There is too
large a gap in emotional state and skills between
the model and the observer, so vicarious learning
does not occur.
107Participant Modeling
- Behavior therapists provide models of successful
coping. - Group therapy provides an excellent opportunity
for participant modeling and vicarious learning.
108Skills Training
- Skills training techniques are based on skill
deficit models of psychopathology. Many clients
have not acquired the necessary skills for
functioning. - Behavior therapists evaluate their clients
functional skills during the assessment phase of
therapy and then use specific skills training
strategies to treatment the clients skill
deficits.
109- Traditional skills training targets include
assertiveness and other social behavior as well
as problem solving.
110Assertiveness and Other Social Behavior
- Wolpe and Lazarus defined assertiveness as a
learned behavior. Individuals are evaluated as
having one of three possible social behavior
styles passive, aggressive, or assertive. - Passive individuals behave in submissive ways
they say yes when they want to say no. - Aggressive individuals dominate others.
- Assertive individual speaks up, expresses
feelings.
111Assertiveness and Other Social Behavior
112Assertiveness and Other Social Behavior
- The most common social behaviors targeted in
assertiveness training are - introducing oneself to strangers,
- giving and receiving compliments,
- saying no to requests from others,
- making requests of others,
- speaking up or voicing an opinion, and
- maintaining social conversations.
113- Assertive behavior is taught through the
following strategies - Instruction Clients are instructed in
assertive eye contact, body posture, voice tone
verbal delivery. - Feedback The therapist or group members give
clients feedback regarding how their efforts at
assertive behavior come across to others. - Behavior rehearsal or role playing Clients are
given opportunities to practice specific
assertive behaviors, such as asking for help or
expressing disagreement without becoming angry or
aggressive.
114- Coaching Therapists whisper feedback and
instructions in the clients ear as a role-play
or practice scenario progresses. - Modeling The therapist or group members
demonstrate appropriate assertive behavior for
specific situations. - Social reinforcement The therapist or group
members offer positive feedback and support for
assertive behavior. - Relaxation training It is needed to reduce
anxiety in social situations.
115- Assertiveness training for individuals with
specific social anxiety and social skills
deficits are used. Social Phobiaa condition
characterized by an excessive, irrational fear of
being scrutinized and evaluated by othersis
treated with a combination of relaxation and
social skills training that includes almost all
the components of traditional assertion training
and graduated or massed exposure to challenging
social situations and interactions.
116Problem Solving Therapy (PST)
- It is a behavioral treatment with cognitive
dimensions. - For rationale of PST, effective problem solving
is a mediator that helps clients manage stresful
life events. It focuses on - Problem orientation This involves teaching
clients to have a positive attitude toward
problems. Problems are opportunity, are solvable.
Believing in own ability to solve problems and
recognizing that effective problem solving
requires time and effort.
117Problem Solving Therapy (PST)
- Problem-solving style Clients are taught a
rational problem-solving style - 1. Define the problem.
- 2. Identify the goal.
- 3. Generate options.
- 4. Choose the best solution.
- 5. Evaluate the outcome
118- Discerning the differences between cognitive and
behavioral therapies is difficult. Most behavior
therapists use cognitive treatment and most
cognitive therapists use behavioral treatments. - Cognitive-behavioral therapy.
-
119- One characteristic of behavior therapy is the
generation of a clear and concrete problem list.
Items in the problem list are defined in
behavioral terms and measurable.
120- Each behavior therapy session includes four
parts - 1.check-in and homework review
- 2. psychoeducation about the patients disorder
and behavior therapy - 3. in-session behavioral or cognitive tasks
- 4. new homework assignments.
121Cultural and Gender Considerations
- Some research indicates behavioral treatments are
effective with minority clients however, Craske
(2010) admits that generally cognitive and
behavioral therapies are not yet proven
multiculturally efficacious. - Behavior therapists need to make multicultural
adjustments in their practices.
122Evidence-Based Status
- Behavioral and cognitive therapies are far and
away the largest producers and consumers of
therapy outcomes research. - The most recent APA Division 12 list of ESTs
includes 60 different treatment protocols, most
of which are behavioral or cognitive-behavioral.
123- Token economies and contingency managementgtgt
- Behavioral activationgtgtdepr
- Progressive muscle relaxationgtgt
- Exposureresponse preventiongtgtanx dissorders
- Problem solving therapygtgtdepr.
124Concluding Comments
- Behavior therapy deserves credit for
demonstrating that particular approaches are
effectivebased on a quantitative
scientific-medical model.
125- If it cant be empirically validated, then its
not behavior therapy.