Clinical Psychology - Exam 3

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Evidence supporting psychotherapy in the mid-1900’s

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NYU Clinical Psychology Exam 3 Lectures on General Issues in Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic Psychotherapy, Humanistic Psychotherapy, Behavior Therapy, Cognitive Psychotherapy and Mindfulness-Based Therapies

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Evidence supporting psychotherapy in the mid-1900’s

In the form of anecdotes, testimonials, and case studies

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Hans Eysenck (1952)

  • Study concluded that clients got better without therapy and psychotherapy was of little benefit

  • Methods have since been criticized and overturned

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Meta-analysis

  • Statistically combines the results of many separate studies – in some cases, hundreds – to create numerical representations of the effects of psychotherapy as tested across massive numbers of settings, therapists, and clients

  • Have yielded consistently supportive results about how well psychotherapy works

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Hans Strupp

  • Identified three parties that should be considered when asking if psychotherapy works

  • Invented the Tripartite Model

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Tripartite Model

Acknowledges the viewpoints of:

  • The client 

  • The therapist 

  • Third parties (e.g., society, family, or managed-care companies)

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The client (the first party)

  • Opinions are valuable, but could also be biased

    • Those who are overly eager to see positive results may overestimate the benefits of therapy

    • Those who are negatively influenced by factors that brought them into therapy may underestimate the benefits of therapy

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The therapist (the second party)

  • Typically have more experience

  • Views can be biased

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Society (the third party)

An outsider to the therapy process who has an interest in how therapy progresses

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When should researchers ask if psychotherapy is helpful? 

  • How long should the benefits last?

  • What about benefits before therapy ends? 

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Self-report 

  • Researchers can solicit the opinions of an interested party using a questionnaire or interview 

    • The content and structure of these will have an impact on the data they yield 

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Behavioral measures 

Researchers could directly observe someone at school or at home to determine whether their behavior has changed

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Efficacy and Effectiveness

Two categories for empirical studies of psychotherapy

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Efficacy

The success of a particular therapy in a controlled study conducted with clients who were chose according to particular study criteria

  • Maximize internal validity by controlling as many aspects as possible

    • Well-defined groups of patients 

    • Manualized treatment guidelines

    • Random assignment

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Effectiveness

The success of a therapy in actual clinical settings in which client problems span a wider range and are not chosen as a result of meeting certain diagnostic criteria

  • Measure the extent that therapy works in “the real world”

  • Maximize external validity 

    • Wider range of clients 

    • Greater variability between therapists’ methods 

    • May or may not include a control group 

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Smith, Glass, & Miller, 1980

“The average person who receives therapy is better off at the end of it than 80 percent of the persons who do not”

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The benefits of psychotherapy appear to…

  • Endure over long periods of time 

  • Exceed placebo effects 

  • Represent clinically (not just statistically) significant change in clients’ well-being

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Psychotherapy is not a panacea 

Some clients experience negative effects. These negative effects clearly appear to be the exception rather than the rule 

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What factors influence therapists’ clinical decisions?

  • Research such as efficacy studies had little influence over their choices 

  • Their own clinical experience had a lot

(Place a higher value on their own intuition and judgements than on any data collected more methodically and scientifically)

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Efficacy studies 

Indicate that psychotherapy works when tested in controlled settings

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Effectiveness studies

Indicate that psychotherapy works as it is commonly applied in realistic settings

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The “Dodo bird verdict”

A nickname for the common research finding that different forms of psychotherapy are roughly equally effective

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Common factors

The notion that different therapies benefit from the same underlying mechanisms

  • Each type of therapy shares some fundamental components

  • Function as “active ingredients” in all forms of psychotherapy

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Therapeutic relationship/alliance

A coalition or partnership between two allies (client and therapist) working in a trusting relationship towards a mutual goal

  • The most important common factor

  • The therapeutic relationship is the most crucial single aspect of therapy

    • Best predictor of therapy outcome

      • Higher correlation for the cognitive-behavior group

    • Accounts for more variability in therapy outcome

  • Clients prefer a warm therapist with whom they can related to over a treatment with empirical support

  • Vital to therapy no matter how much emphasis the therapist places on it

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How does the therapeutic relationship contribute to successful therapy? 

Three possibilites:

  1. A good alliance facilitates client improvement 

  2. As clients improve, they experience an enhanced relationship with their therapists 

    • Just imagine how you would rate your alliance with a physician if he or she cured your serious disease

  3. A reciprocal relationship could also exist

Correlation does not equal causation

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Hope

Optimism that things will begin to improve

  • The improvement can begin before mechanisms are implemented

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Attention

Acknowledging the problem and focusing on it may result in improvement

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Types of Psychotherapy

  • Eclectic/integrative therapy

    • Most commonly endorsed until 2010

  • Cognitive therapy

    • Currently most popular

  • Psychodynamic/psychoanalytic therapy

    • Declined significantly since 1960

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Psychodynamic Therapy

  • Came first historically

    • Many later therapies were reactions against this approach

  • Despite its decline, remains relevant and widely used 

    • Influences clinical psychology through adaptations of its traditional methods into novel approaches that better suit contemporary culture 

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Psychodynamic psychotherapy

An approach to psychotherapy deriving from the theories of Sigmund Freud

  • Sigmund Freud - The pioneer of the psychodynamic approach to clinical psychology 

Known in its classic form as psychoanalysis (replaced by other terms at various points)

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Goal of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy

To make the unconscious conscious

  • Once we become aware of unconscious processes (through insight) we can make efforts to control them deliberately rather than them controlling us 

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Insight

Looking inside oneself and noticing something that had previously gone unseen

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Unconscious

Mental activity occurring outside our awareness

  • One of Freud’s most important and enduring contributions to clinical psychology 

According to Freudians:

  • It exists and exerts a powerful influence on our day-to-day and minute-to-minute lives

  • Its processes underlie all forms of psychopathology

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Accessing the Unconscious 

  • Not done in an empirical and/or factual way 

  • Done through inference, deduction, and conjecture 

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Free Association

A technique in which the psychodynamic psychotherapists ask clients to say whatever comes to mind without censoring themselves at all

  • The client’s task is to verbalize any thought that occurs 

  • The idea is that the words of people in such states of mind can be revealing of their innermost thoughts and feelings 

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Freudian “slips”

Verbal or behavioral mistakes determined, according to the psychodynamic psychotherapists, by unconscious motivations

  • All our behavior is determined 

  • There is no such thing as a mistake, accident, or slip 

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Dreams

Communicate unconscious material

  • Our minds convert latent content (the raw thoughts and feelings of the unconscious) to manifest content (the actual plot of the dream as we remember it) 

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Dream work

The process of converting the latent content of a dream to its manifest content

  • Dream interpretations (and other attempts to understand the unconscious) are inferential rather than factual

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Resistance

Client behavior that impedes discussion or conscious awareness of selected topics or emotions

  • Clients feel anxious when thoughts and feelings are being laid bare too extensively or too quickly

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Freud’s Structural Model of the Mind 

Three forces (the id, ego, and superego), the interaction of which occurs largely outside our awareness

  • Our unconscious mental processes involve a constant battle between an id demanding instant gratification and a superego demanding constant restraint

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The id

The part of the mind that generates all the pleasure-seeking, selfish, indulgent, animalistic impulses 

  • Seeks immediate satisfaction of its wishes

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The superego

The part of the mind that establishes rules, restrictions, and prohibitions 

  • Tells us what we “should” do

  • An internalization of the rules and demands that came from authority figures

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The ego

A mediator and compromise maker between the id and superego 

  • Faces two challenges: 

    • Partially satisfying both of these opposing forces 

    • Meeting the demands of reality

  • The person negotiating between the demands for instant pleasure and the demands to follow rules

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Defense mechanisms

Techniques used by the ego to manage conflict between the id and superego

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Repression

When the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it the ego can repress conscious awareness of the impulse and the id/superego conflict around it 

  • “sweep them under the rug”

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Projection

When the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can project the id impulse onto other people around us

  • We convince ourselves that the unacceptable impulse belongs to someone else, not to ourselves

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Reaction formation

When the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can form a reaction against the id impulse 

  • Essentially, do the exact opposite

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Displacement

When the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can displace the id impulse toward a safer target 

  • Redirect the impulse towards another person or object to minimize repercussions

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Sublimation

When the id has an impulse and the superego rejects it, the ego can sublimate it 

  • Redirect it in such a way that the resulting behavior actually benefits others

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Some defense mechanisms are more mature/healthier than others

  • Denial and repression are considered immature 

  • Sublimation is considered mature

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Transference

Clients’ tendency to form relationships with therapists in which they unconsciously and unrealistically expect the therapist to behave like important people from the clients’ past

  • Transference may be the most essential means for the psychodynamic therapist to access a client’s unconscious material 

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Countertransference

Transference by therapists onto clients 

  • Generally strive to minimize it

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Psychosexual Stages

Oral, anal, phallic, latency, and genital

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Fixation

Unsuccessful resolution of the psychological tasks of a particular developmental stage

  • Most often occurs when parents do “too much” or “too little” in response to the child’s needs at a certain developmental point

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Oral stage

The first of the psychosexual stages and the stage from which issues of dependency may emerge

  • Occurs during the first year and a half

  • Children whose parents mismanage this stage may display blatantly “oral” behaviors later in life 

  • The primary issue at this stage is dependency 

    • If parents overindulge children, children may become overly trusting, naïve, and unrealistically optimistic personalities as adults

    • If parents are not responsive to children, children may develop overly mistrusting, suspicious, and unrealistically pessimistic personalities

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Anal stage

The second of the psychosexual developmental stages, and the stage from which issues of control may emerge

  • Occurs when the child is about 1.5 to 3 years old 

  • The primary issue at this stage is control 

    • If parents are too demanding of children, children can become overly concerned about getting everything just right 

    • If parents are too lenient of children at this stage, children can become lax about organization

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Phallic stage

The third of the psychosexual stages, and the stage from which issues of self-worth may emerge 

  • Occurs from about age 3 to about age 6

  • The view of the self – self-worth – is the key consequence

    • When parents respond too positively, they overinflate the child’s sense of self

    • When parents reject their child’s wishes for a special, close relationship, self-worth can be wounded

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Humanistic Psychotherapy 

People arrive with an inborn tendency to grow

  • Stood in opposition to the psychodynamic approach

  • Several terms for the concept: nondirective, client-centered, and person-centered

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Carl Rogers

The single most prominent figure in terms of influence on how therapists practice psychotherapy

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Self actualization

The inborn tendency to grow in a healthy way

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Positive regard

Warmth, love, and acceptance from those around us

  • When this is conditional we will:

    • Emphasize certain aspects “branches” of ourselves 

    • Suppress other aspects “branches” of ourselves 

  • This need can override the natural tendency to self-actualize 

    • Choice between 

      • Receiving this need from the important people in our lives 

      • Following our natural inclinations

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Goals of Humanistic Psychotherapy 

To foster self actualization 

  • Psychological problems and pathology are the byproduct of a stifled growth process

  • To create a climate in which clients can resume their natural growth towards psychological wellness 

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Conditional positive regard

Communicates that we are prized “only if” we meet certain conditions 

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Conditions of worth

The stipulations that individuals may place on their positive regard of others

  • To meet these conditions, children often go astray of their own self-actualization tendencies

  • Conditional positive regard from others brings forth conditional positive self-regard 

  • Unconditional positive regard from others brings forth unconditional positive self-regard

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Real self 

The self that an individual actually experiences

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Ideal self

The self than an individual could experience if he or she fulfilled his or her own potential

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Incongruency

The discrepancy between the real self and the ideal self

  • Humanist view this as the root of psychopathology 

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Congruence

A match between the real self and the ideal self 

  • Achieved when self-actualization is allowed to guide a person’s life without interference by any conditions of worth 

  • Happens when persons experience unconditional positive regard from others

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Elements of Humanistic Psychotherapy 

Three essential therapeutic conditions 

  • Empathy 

  • Unconditional positive regard 

  • Genuineness

Claimed they are both necessary and sufficient

  • Appear to be common factors

Attitudes, not behaviors

  • Humanists tend to emphasize how therapists should be with clients 

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Empathy

The therapist’s ability to sense the client’s emotions just as the client would, to perceive and understand the events of the client’s life in a compassionate way 

  • Involves a deep, nonjudgmental understanding of the client’s experiences 

    • The therapist’s own values and point of view are temporarily suspended 

  • The therapist sees life through the client’s eyes and adopts the client’s frame of reference 

    • Hence the term client-centered therapy 

  • Can have a profound and positive impact

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Unconditional positive regard

The full acceptance of another person without any conditions or stipulations “no matter what”

  • Allows clients to grow in a purely self-directed way 

  • Contributes to a climate in which clients realize they are free to be wholly true to themselves 

  • Facilitates higher levels of congruence and self-actualization

  • Conditional situations impede growth and cause us to drift away from our true selves 

  • Top priority to accept clients entirely and unconditionally 

    • Allow them to grow naturally into their own potential rather than being pressured by others to grow in various directions

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Genuineness

The quality in the therapist of truthfulness, realness, or congruence. Is in contrast to playing the therapist role falsely

  • Also called therapist congruence

    • Match between the therapists real and ideal selves

  • The therapist is truly empathic towards clients and truly does unconditionally prize them

  • The therapist's personality plays a more prominent role 

  • Encourage a relatively high degree of transparency by the therapist

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Reflection

A therapist’s response to a client involving a rephrase or restatement of the client’s statement in a way that highlights the client’s feelings or emotions

  • Serves as a mechanism by which 

    • Empathy, unconditional positive regard, and genuineness can be communicated 

    • The therapist can express the attitudes that humanists emphasize

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Existential Psychotherapy 

Each person is essentially alone in the world

  • This anxiety is the root of all psychopathology

  • Contributes to a powerful sense of meaningless

  • Overcome meaninglessness by creating their own meaning and make choices that are true to themselves in the present and future

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Gestalt Therapy 

Emphasizes a holistic approach to enhancing the client’s experience and deemphasize clients’ past experiences

  • Founded by Fritz Perls 

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Positive psychology

A broad based approach that emphasizes 

  • Human strengths rather than pathology

    • Develop and maintain positive attributes

    • Suggests that this thought process prevents problems such as depression and anxiety and improves the lives of those who already experience such problems 

  • The cultivation of happiness in addition to the reduction of symptoms in psychotherapy 

    • “embraces both healing what is weak and nurturing what is strong”

  • Founded by Martin Seligman

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Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)

A short-term humanistic therapy

  • Emphasizes the expression, acknowledgement, and healing power of emotions in the present moment 

    • Emotions that may have been “bottled up” for a long time

  • Show clients unconditional acceptance

  • “Empty chair” technique

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Why use behavioral therapy?

  • The psychodynamic and humanistic approaches are not entirely empirical 

  • They are characterized by speculations of mental processes that can’t be defined, directly observed, or scientifically tested

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Behavior therapy

An approach to psychotherapy emphasizing empiricism, observable and quantifiable problems and progress, and a lack of speculation about internal mental processes 

  • The clinical application of behavioral principles

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Ivan Pavlov

Discovered “classical conditioning” 

  • Through experience—dogs learned that food was often preceded by a particular stimulus

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John Watson

Claimed that “psychology should not study the inner workings of the mind that may occur in between”

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Edward Lee Thorndike

Coined the Law of Effect 

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The Law of Effect 

All organisms pay attention to the consequences (or effects) of their actions

  • Actions followed by pleasurable consequences are more likely to occur 

  • Actions followed by unpleasant consequences are less likely to occur

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B. F. Skinner

Argued that operant conditioning was as great an influence on human behavior as classical conditioning

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Goal of behavior therapy

Observable behavior change

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Behavior therapy emphasizes empiricism

The study of human behavior should be scientific

  • Methods that can be scientifically evaluated (i.e. testable hypotheses)

  • Collect empirical data (allows the therapist to evaluate change)

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Defining problems behaviorally

Behaviors are not symptoms of some underlying problem – those behaviors are the problem

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Classical Conditioning

Conditioning in which an unconditioned stimulus that produces an unconditioned response is paired with a conditioned stimulus such that the conditioned stimulus elicits a similar response

  • It’s passive

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Operant Conditioning

Conditioning in which the organism “operates” on the environment, notices the consequences of the behavior, and incorporates those consequences into decisions regarding future behavior

  • Behavior is a function of its consequences

  • It’s active

  • Proponents of this methodology believe consequences shape all behavior

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Unconditioned stimulus

The stimulus that elicits the unconditioned response before any conditioning has taken place

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Unconditioned response

The response elicited by the unconditioned stimulus before any conditioning has taken place (inborn association)

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Conditioned stimulus

The stimulus paired with the unconditioned stimulus that ultimately elicits the conditioned response

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Conditioned response

The response elicited by the conditioned stimulus after the conditioned stimulus has been paired with the unconditioned stimulus

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Generalization

A process by which the conditioned response is evoked by stimuli that are similar to, but not an exact match for, the conditioned stimulus

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Discrimination

A process by which the conditioned response is not evoked by stimuli that are similar to, but not an exact match for, the conditioned stimulus

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Contingencies

The “if…, then…” statements connecting actions to outcomes that organisms learn through operant conditioning 

  • These include those labeled as abnormal 

  • Behavior therapists induce behavior change by revising these

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Exposure therapy

A form of behavior therapy based on classical conditioning in which clients gradually face a feared object or situation

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Phobias

According to the behavior therapist, these are the result of classical conditioning 

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Imaginal exposure

Exposure to anxiety-provoking objects via imagination 

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In vivo exposure

Exposure to anxiety-provoking objects in real life 

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Graded exposure

A gradual approach to exposing clients to feared objects or situations 

  • The client and therapist collaboratively create an anxiety hierarchy

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