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Exploration of value dimensions from client therapist compatibility researchBergan, John Robert, 1965- January 1992 (has links)
Past research suggests that development of a compatible client therapist relationship is enhanced when the client and therapist share certain values. The purpose of this study was to explore the nature of the value dimensions that have been identified. It was hypothesized that Spiegel's value orientation profile (Spiegel, 1985) would provide a reasonable representation of the structure of these value dimensions. The World Values Scale (Ibrahim & Kahn, 1986) and the Value Orientation Profile were administered to a sample of 121 students to assess their position on the dimensions from Spiegel's model. Confirmatory factor analysis showed that Spiegel's model appeared to provide a poor fit to the data from both instruments. Two one factor models were then tested assessing value placed on achievement and philosophical concerns respectively. These models were found to provide a good fit to the data. Future research is needed to further validate these models with different populations in different settings.
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Construct validation of quality of life for the severely mentally illJohnson, Gwendolyn Watkins, 1955- January 1992 (has links)
This study focused on the quality of life experienced by persons with severe mental illness (SMI). Previous studies indicate the need for a multi-dimensional approach to the study of quality of life and its subjective indicators. For the SMI, attention should be paid not only to the direct and intentional effects of interventions, but also to the indirect and unintentional effects, both negative and positive. Hence, an overall evaluation of individuals within this group is indicated. A multitrait-multimethod approach to construct validation using confirmatory factor analysis was employed. The hypothesized factors were modeled as multiple traits and the multiple perspectives of the respondents (i.e. patient, case manager, family member) were multiple methods. A total of 265 severely mentally ill adults served by a network of agencies in four cities were randomly sampled. The sample was approximately 50% male and 50% female, ages ranged from 19-78 years.
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The generation of CD4⺠regulatory T cells in transplantation toleranceKingsley, Cherry January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Psychology and Community Collaboration| Hope-Focused Marriage Enrichment Leader's Manual for Brazilian CommunityHatcher, Raquel B. O. 28 December 2013 (has links)
<p>Although Hope-Focused Couple Approach (HFCA) has been extensively researched in the United States, and demonstrated efficacy as an empirical supported couple enrichment intervention (Jakubowski, Milne, Brunner, & Miller, 2004), there are not enough studies with different populations. This project attempts to implement the HFCA with Brazilian Christian couples in collaboration with local churches in Brazil. In order to accomplish this goal, the author developed a hope-focused couples workshop leader's manual that is sensitive to the Brazilian cultural and social context. </p>
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The Roles of Emotion Regulation and Working Memory in the Relationship Between Depressive Symptoms and False Memory for Negative InformationVelsor, Sarah F. 30 August 2016 (has links)
<p> The current study examined the relationship between depressive symptoms and false memory formation for negative information, while looking at emotion regulation as a potential mediator and working memory as a potential moderator using a sample of undergraduate students from a medium Midwestern University. Participants were 95 students currently attending college. All participants completed measures of emotion regulation abilities, depressive symptoms, working memory, and a false memory task. Results indicated that depressive symptoms and emotion dysregulation were correlated with one another. The meditational analysis indicated that emotion regulation abilities did not mediate the relationship between depressive symptoms and false memory formation. Subsequent moderation analyses indicated that working memory abilities moderated the relationship between emotion dysregulation and false memory recognition, but that working memory did not moderate at any other point in the model. Implications and limitations of the present study were discussed herein.</p>
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Prospective Clients' Expectations about Videoconference PsychotherapyDuffy, Daniel Q. 31 August 2016 (has links)
<p> The implementation of telecommunication technologies has allowed traditionally underserved populations to receive healthcare, including those who lack access to mental health treatment. While previous literature has found <i>videoconference therapy</i> (VCP) as a viable alternative to traditional <i>face-to-face therapy</i> for specific disorders, common therapeutic factors, such as, <i>expectations</i> for therapy, has been largely overlooked. Vignettes depicting either VCP or traditional therapy and a scale for expectations of the therapy provider were given to 192 mechanicalTurk participants. Significant, yet clinically insignificant results indicated lower expectations for VCP psychotherapists in their ability to establish a working relationship and respond to an emergency. While a significant difference was identified, participants rated both modalities similar and relatively high. Analysis of a qualitative statement further indicates VCP providers may have an inability to establish a human connection. Future research should identify working relationship expectancy interventions for VCP therapy.</p>
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Examining trainee therapists' use of recommended counseling strategies for facilitating posttraumatic growth in psychotherapy with clients who have experienced trauma| A qualitative analysisAlas, Renee Marie Sloane 11 February 2017 (has links)
<p> Posttraumatic growth (PTG) describes the experience of positive changes following one’s struggle with trauma. Calhoun and Tedeschi (1999) recommended counseling strategies for how therapists may facilitate the process of PTG within psychotherapy with clients. Because the efficacy of these strategies had not yet been assessed empirically, this study sought to qualitatively explore their use by trainee therapists, an unstudied population in the PTG literature. A total of 9 videotaped psychotherapy sessions conducted with 5 clients at 2 community counseling centers were selected for analysis. Directed content analysis using a coding system developed for this study was employed to analyze therapist responses to clients’ discussions of trauma. Results indicated that the therapists in this study most commonly used responses consistent with Calhoun and Tedeschi’s (1999) Recommendation #1 <i>Focus on Listening Without Trying to Solve</i>. Specifically, the most frequently used responses were <i>minimal encouraging</i> (<i>M</i> = 86.9, <i>SD</i> = 69.7), followed by <i>closed-ended questions about factual</i> information (M = 20.8, SD = 16.1) and <i>reflecting factual</i> information (<i>M</i> = 20.6, <i>SD</i> = 15.7) in both early and later sessions. Overall, therapists responded to <i> descriptions</i> of the clients’ traumatic events and <i> evaluative</i> content such as thoughts, beliefs, and attitudes about the traumatic event, more so than <i>affective</i> content such as one’s feelings and emotions. Across participants, Recommendations #2, #3 and #4 were rarely used to promote growthful experiences among individuals suffering from trauma and adversity, and missed opportunities for growth were also identified by the researcher. As a result, this study offers additional recommendations to include in Calhoun and Tedeschi’s (1999) counseling strategies for facilitating PTG, and speaks to the need for graduate clinical psychology programs to train students in facilitating client strengths and PTG following trauma.</p>
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Clinician Language| Effects on Perception of Clinician and Treatment for Sexual AssaultBeyer, Melissa 19 May 2017 (has links)
<p> Research centering on rape and sexual assault has revealed much regarding the various aspects that influence how people perceive sexual assault. There is an underrepresentation of the influence of language on how these perceptions are formed, yet preliminary research has suggested that in regards to sexual assault, language can alter how people view the perpetrator, the victim, and the assault in general (Bohner, 2001; Grubb & Harrower, 2009; McDonald & Kline, 2004; Sleath and Bull, 2009; Wilkinson, 2008). The previous literature on sexual assault and language focuses on the effect of language on attribution of blame between the victim and the perpetrator. Until the present study, there is no study that has looked at how language affects the clinical setting (the therapeutic relationship) between the survivor and a mental health professional. The study was conducted at medium-sized Midwestern University and recruited participants from an online research participation system for undergraduate students. The sample consisted of 124 participants that were mostly young adults, with 86.3% of participants aging between 18 to 19 years old. Participants were predominantly female (n=105) and Caucasian (n=107). After completing the brief demographics survey, participants completed a Sexual Assault Term Preferences Survey (SATPS) to assess their preferences on word choice when discussing sexual assault with a mental health professional. Terms associated with sexual assault were sorted into three main categories: terms describing the individual who was sexually assaulted, the act itself, and the individual who committed the sexual assault. Repeated measures ANOVAs were conducted on the term preferences for each category. For each of the three major categories, there were statistically significant preferences and dislikes found. For example when describing the act itself, participants reported higher preferences for terms such as "sexual assault" and "crime" than terms such as "coerced sex" or "interaction." Results demonstrate the language component to treating individuals who have experienced sexual assault and that the language choices mental health professionals use to discuss a sexual assault could influence their therapeutic relationship with clients.</p>
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Use of an External Inhibition Procedure in the Treatment of Spider Phobic SubjectsGilmore, Jerome D. 01 January 1984 (has links)
This research represented an extension of previous work on the therapeutic application of the external inhibition phenomenon, and sought to examine the effects of such a procedure on the verbal- cognitive, motoric, and physiological components of the anxiety response. To accomplish this, subjects were selected and treatment effects evaluated on the basis of changes elicited in each of the three response modalities by a specific fear stimulus, The relative effectiveness of the external inhibition treatment in modifying the multiple components of the anxiety response was examined by a comparison with procedures controlling for expectancy effects and repeated exposure to the phobic stimulus.
A series of hypotheses were derived which predicted that the external inhibition treatment would produce significant reductions in the self-report, behavioral, and physiological channels being assessed. It was also predicted that these reductions in anxiety for subjects receiving the external inhibition treatment would be significantly greater than those evidenced by subjects receiving procedures designed to control for expectancy effects and repeated stimulus exposures.
Subjects were 24 female undergraduate students enrolled at Virginia Commonwealth University who were selected from a pool of 316 females who answered the Spider Questionnaire (Klorman, Weerts, Hastings, Melamed, & Lang, 1974). Three separate selection criteria were utilized to help insure that only those subjects who were highly fearful of spiders were selected for participation in the study: (1) a total score on the SPQ that was within the upper 25% of the distribution of scores on the SPQ, (2) a distance score of at least 24 inches on a passive behavioral avoidance test (BAT), and (3) an increase in heart rate of at least 10% during the initial exposure to the spider. Eight subjects meeting these criteria were randomly assigned to one of three experimental groups: An External Inhibition group, a Graduated Exposure Group, or a Test-Retest Control group.
Following an initial pretreatment assessment, subjects in the External Inhibition group were exposed to the spider in a BAT format, and were presented with an external stimulus (white noise administered in 2-second pulses for 30-seconds at 95dbA) each time they began to feel anxious and stopped the advance of the spider. Graduated Exposure subjects received the same procedure without the external stimulus and were instead instructed to ”relax” themselves whenever they began to feel anxious. Subjects in the Test-Retest group received no intervening procedure and simply sat quietly without the spider present for a comparable period of time.
Dependent measures consisted of pre- and posttreatment BAT scores, subjective distress ratings (SUDS) elicited by the spider, heart rate responding, skin conductance activity, and SPQ scores.
The results failed to provide any evidence of the relative efficacy of external inhibition in modifying phobic behavior. In all cases, the external inhibition treatment was found to be either ineffective or no more effective than the two control procedures in modifying the multiple components of the anxiety response. These findings are discussed in terms of various situational, procedural, and subject factors that may have contributed to the rapid habituation of anxiety among all three experimental groups, and thereby precluded the valid evaluation of potential treatment effects. The implications of these results for the external inhibition phenomenon and for analogue fear research are discussed.
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Effects of Cognitive Set on the Physiological, Subjective, and Behavioral Responses to Fearful StimuliGilmore, Jerome D. 01 January 1981 (has links)
This research investigated the effects of cognitive set on the physiological, subjective, and motoric responses of fearful and non-fearful subjects exposed to specific fear stimuli. High, moderate, and low mutilation fear subjects were given instructions designed to persuade them that they were or were not afraid of mutilation stimuli. The extent to which instructions differentially affected subjects in the three fear groups and produced differential effects on responses in the three modalities was examined. The degree to which the physiological, self-report, and behavioral channels responded concordantly was also investigated.
A series of hypotheses were derived which generally indicated that high-fear instructions would produce significantly greater physiological, self-report, and behavioral indices of anxiety than low-fear instructions. It was also predicted that these effects would be great- est for subjects in the moderate-fear group, and that the subjective and motoric response systems would exhibit greater differential change due to instructions than the physiological channel. In addition, high mutilation fear subjects were predicted to show greater concordance between response systems than the moderate- or low-fear groups.
Subjects were 48 female undergraduate students enrolled at Virginia Commonwealth University who were selected from a pool of 168 females who answered the Mutilation Questionnaire (Klorman, Weerts, Hastings, Melamed, & Lang, 1974). Sixteen subjects were assigned to each of the three fear groups on the basis of their total MQ scores, with 8 subjects in each of the six combined fear-instructional conditions. Following the administration of either high- or low-fear instructions, each subject was exposed to 5 neutral and 5 fearful slides. Each slide was presented for a 10-second duration with a 120—second interval between slides.
Dependent measures consisted of skin conductance responses (SCR), heart rate responses (HRR), and subjective distress ratings (SUDS) for each slide, total scores on a posttest administration of the MQ, and a behavioral avoidance Test (BAT) in seconds of latency to respond.
Results indicated that instruction had the predicted effects on the SCR‘s produced by all three fear groups to neutral stimuli, and on the level of heart rate exhibited by high mutilation fear subjects to both fearful and neutral slides. With the exception of the SUDS ratings of the moderate-fear group, the predicted instructional effects were obtained on both self-report measures for all three groups. The BAT measure failed to produce any significant instructional effects. The results did not support the hypotheses predicting greater instructional effects for moderately fearful subjects and no significant differences were obtained in the degree of concordance between dependent measures for the three fear groups.
Results are discussed with regard to the effects of cognitive set on the various components of the anxiety response and the relationship between arousal level and effectiveness of the instructional manipulation. Issues of clinical relevance, such as the treatment of phobias, were also discussed with regard to the results of the present study. Methodological problems in the present study and suggestions for future research are also discussed.
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