Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions Flashcards

1
Q

The cognitive-behavioral interventions share the assumptions that ____ mediates ____ and ____ ____, that some types of cognitions may be ____ and ____, and that dysfunctional emotions and behaviors change when ____ ____ are ____.

A

Cognition; Emotional and Behavioral Dysfunction; Monitored and Altered; Relevant Cognitions are Modified

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2
Q

As their name suggests, these interventions integrate a variety of ____ and ____ ____. For instance, these interventions for generalized anxiety in adults often combine – self-monitoring, self-control desensitization, anxiety management training, and cognitive restructuring, while treatments for children’s anticipatory anxiety and fears (e.g., fear of the dark, fear of medical procedures) may integrate coping self-statements, positive visual imagery, relaxation techniques, modeling, and positive reinforcement.

A

Cognitive and Behavioral Techniques

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3
Q

Ellis’s (1985) ____-____ ____ ____ conceptualizes emotions and behaviors in terms of a chain of events, A-B-C, where A is the external (____) ____ to which the individual is exposed; B is the ____ the individual has about A; and C is the ____ or ____ that results from B. In other words, an emotional or behavioral response to an external event is due to ____ ____ that ____ rather than to the event itself.

A

Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT); (Activating) Event; Belief; Emotion or Behavior; Beliefs About that Event

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4
Q

According to Ellis, the primary cause of neurosis is the ____ ____ of certain ____ ____ ____ such as the belief that it’s necessary to be loved by everyone or the belief that one should be thoroughly competent, intelligent, and achieving in all respects. ____ ____ are characterized by – dogmatic demands (must’s and should’s), awfulizing (“it’s awful if…”), low frustration tolerance, and negative evaluations of oneself and others.

A

Continual Repetition; Common Irrational Beliefs; Irrational Beliefs

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5
Q

As defined by Ellis, irrational beliefs are the result of ____ ____ ____ that include – negativism, moodiness, and excitement-seeking and that interfere with the ability to ____ ____ and ____.

A

Certain Biological Tendencies; Tink Productively and Rationally

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6
Q

In REBT, two more events, D and E, are added to the ABC chain – D is the therapist’s attempt to ____ and ____ the individual’s irrational beliefs, and E refers to the ____ ____ and ____ that result from D.

A

Dispute and Alter; Alternative Thoughts and Beliefs

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7
Q

To help clients replace irrational beliefs with more appropriate ones, therapists adopt an ____, ____, _____ and _____ and use a variety of techniques including - ____________.

A

Educational, Confrontative, and Persuasive Approach; modeling, behavior rehearsal, problem-solving, in vivo desensitization, rational-emotive imagery, and cognitive homework assignments.

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8
Q

Beck’s (1967, 1984) ____ ____ is also referred to as cognitive-behavioral therapy and was originally developed as a treatment for ____ but has since been successfully applied to several other disorders including anxiety, anorexia, bulimia, sexual dysfunction, and substance abuse. The primary goal of CT is to help clients ____ and ____ _____ and ____ ____.

A

Cognitive Therapy (CT); Depression; Identify and Alter Dysfunctional and Distorted Assumptions

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9
Q

Practitioners of CT target the four types of cognitions -

A

Schemas, Automatic Thoughts, Cognitive Distortions, Cognitive Profile

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10
Q

____ are underlying cognitive structures and rules that consist of core beliefs and that determine how individuals codify, categorize, and interpret their experiences. They are revealed in ____ ____ and supported by ____ ____.

A

Schemas; Automatic Thoughts; Cognitive Distortions

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11
Q

Cognitive schemas develop ____ in ____ as the result of ____, ____, and ____ _____. They can be either ____ or ____ and may be ____ until they’re activated by ____ or ____ ____, especially stress caused by conditions like those under which they ____ ____. Once activated, dysfunctional schema impairs the ability to ____ ____ and predispose the individual to depression or other disorders.

A

Early in Life; Biological, Developmental, and Environmental Factors; Functional of Dysfunctional; Dormant; Internal or External Stress; Originally Developed; Think Rationally

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12
Q

____ ____ are “surface level cognitions” that “intercede between an event or stimulus and the individual’s emotional and behavioral reactions.”

A

Automatic Thoughts

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13
Q

Automatic thoughts are not necessarily associated with ____ ____ but contribute to dysfunction when they’re the result of ____ ____ and are frequent, persistent, and not critically examined.

A

Psychological Dysfunction; Maladaptive Schemas

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14
Q

____ ____ are systematic errors or biases in information processing and are the link between maladaptive cognitive schemas and negative automatic thoughts.

A

Cognitive Distortions

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15
Q

Common distortions include – ____ ____ (drawing conclusions without corroborative evidence), ____ (drawing general conclusions based on a single event), ____ ____ (attending to detail while ignoring the total context), ____ (erroneously attributing external events to oneself), ____ ____ (thinking in polarized, “either/or” ways), and ____ ____ (believing things are a certain way because one feels they are that way).

A

Arbitrary Inference; Overgeneralization; Selective Abstraction; Personalization; Dichotomous Thinking; Emotional Reasoning

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16
Q

Like automatic thoughts, cognitive distortions become problematic when –

A

they are pervasive and are not critically examined or challenged.

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17
Q

According to Beck, each psychological disorder is characterized by a different ____ ____. For example, depression involves the “cognitive triad” of a negative view of oneself, the world, and the future, while the cognitive profile for anxiety reflects an excessive form of normal survival mechanisms and consists of unrealistic fears about physical and psychological threats.

A

Cognitive Profile

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18
Q

CT is distinguished from other cognitive-behavioral therapies by several characteristics. First, CT relies on ____ ____, which involves developing a collaborative therapist-client relationship and gathering evidence to test hypotheses about the client’s beliefs and assumptions.

A

Collaborative Empiricism

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19
Q

The second distinguishing characteristic, CT is a ____-____ ____, with the average length of therapy being _ ____ and sessions being ____ and ____-____. With regard to latter, the first session ordinarily addresses the following goals: a) ____ ____ and ____; b) ____ the client to cognitive therapy; c) ____ the client about their disorder, the cognitive model, and the therapy process; d) ____ the client’s difficulties and ____ ____; e) determining and, if necessary, correcting the client’s ____ ____ ____; f) collecting additional information about the ____ ____; and g) developing a ____ ____.

A

Time-Limited Treatment; 15 Sessions; Structured and Goal-Oriented; Establishing Rapport and Trust; Socializing; Educating; Normalizing; Instilling Hope; Expectations about Therapy; Client’s Problems; Goal List

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20
Q

The third distinguishing characteristic, whole focus of CT in on the client’s ____ ____, historical material may be addressed to clarify their ____ ____. Fourth, CT assumes that relevant cognitions become accessible and modifiable only with affect ____, and, consequently, ____ and other techniques are used to elicit affect.

A

Current Experiences; Core Beliefs; Arousal; Imagery

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21
Q

The fifth distinguishing characteristic, questioning is a primary therapeutic tool and often takes the form of ____ ____, which is also known as guided discovery and involves asking questions that designed to help the client reach logical conclusions about a problem and its consequences.

A

Socratic Dialogue

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22
Q

The sixth distinguishing characteristic, ____ ____ is a focus throughout treatment. For instance, during therapy, the therapist emphasizes the client’s part in causing change in moo and behavior, and toward the end of therapy, the therapist works with the client to develop a ____-____ ____.

A

Relapse Prevention; Self-Therapy Plan

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23
Q

CT incorporates a variety of –

A

behavioral and cognitive techniques.

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24
Q

Behavioral strategies include –

A

activity scheduling, behavior rehearsal, social skills training, and relaxation.

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25
Q

Cognitive strategies include –

A

the downward arrow (“If so, then what?”), questioning the evidence, decatastrophizing, mental imagery, and cognitive rehearsal.

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26
Q

Clients are often given ____ ____, and an early assignment requires the client to keep a “____ ____ of ____ ____” to identify the client’s automatic thoughts.

A

Homework Assignments; Daily Record of Dysfunctional Thoughts

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27
Q

The specific techniques used in therapy depend on the ____ and ____ of the client’s ____. For example, behavioral techniques designed to increase the client’s overall activity level are often the initial interventions for clients with severe depression, while cognitive techniques are usually the initial interventions for those with mild to moderate depression.

A

Nature and Severity; Symptoms

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28
Q

Self-Instructional Training, Thought Stopping, and Attribution Retraining are –

A

Interventions, like REBT and CT, are categorized as cognitive restructuring techniques and conceptualize maladaptive behaviors as the result of disturbances in thinking. However, they’re narrower in focus and utilize a more restricted range of strategies.

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29
Q

Meichenbaum and Goodman (1971) originally used ____-____ ____ to help impulsive and hyperactive children perform academic and other tasks more successfully by teaching them to interpolate adaptive self-controlling thoughts between a stimulus situation and their response to that situation. ____ incorporates the work of Vygotsky and Luria, who proposed that true voluntary behavior does not occur until there is a shift from ____ to ____ ____ ____, as well as Bandura’s work on observational learning.

A

Self-Instructional Training (SIT); SIT; External to Internal Language Control

30
Q

SIT involves five steps –

A

Cognitive Modeling; Cognitive Participant modeling; Cognitive Participant Modeling; Overt Self-Instruction; Overt Self-Instruction; Fading Overt Self-Instruction; Covert Self-Instruction.

31
Q

Cognitive Modeling

A

The client observes a model perform the task while the model makes self-statements aloud. Self-statements include questions about the nature of the task, answers to those questions, specific instruction on how to do the task, and self-reinforcement.

32
Q

Cognitive Participant Modeling

A

The client performs the task as the model verbalizes the instructions.

33
Q

Overt Self-Instruction

A

The client performs the task while instructing themselves aloud.

34
Q

Fading Overt Self-Instruction

A

The client whispers the instructions while carrying out the task.

35
Q

Covert Self-Instruction

A

The client performs the task while saying the instructions covertly.

36
Q

____ ____ entails eliminating obsessive ruminations, self-criticism, depressive or anxiety-arousing ideas, and other unwanted or unproductive thoughts by using such techniques as covertly yelling, “stop, stop, stop!” or snapping a rubber band placed around the wrist whenever unwanted thoughts occur. Thought stopping is often combined with ____ ____, which involves making alternative assertive self-statements following thought stopping.

A

Thought Stopping; Covert Assertion

37
Q

____ ____ Focuses on altering the individual’s perceptions of the causes of their problematic behavior and has been successfully used to treat depression, anxiety, alcoholism, and several other disorders as well as to improve the academic performance of underachieving students.

A

Attribution Retraining

38
Q

Attribution retraining is consistent with the assumptions of the ____ ____ ____ ____ and with the ____ ____ ____ that is promoted in Seligman’s (1990) theory of learned optimism. Its goal is to help clients attribute their failures to _________________ and successes to ___________________.

A

Reformulated Learned Helplessness Model; Optimistic Explanatory Style; External, Unstable, and Specific Factors; Internal, Stable, and Global Factors

39
Q

Coping and problem-solving techniques –

A

use a combination of cognitive and behavioral strategies to help clients deal effectively with problematic external events.

40
Q

____ ____ was designed to help people deal with stress by increasing their coping skills. Treatment involves three phases.

A

Stress Inoculation

41
Q

Stress Inoculation phase a) ____ ____ ____ ____ is also known as the ____ ____. It is primarily educational and involves helping the client understand their behavioral and cognitive responses to stressful situation.

A

The Cognitive Preparation Phase; Conceptualization Phase

42
Q

Stress Inoculation phase b) During the ____ ____ and ____ ____, the client learns and rehearses a variety of coping skills. Specific interventions during this phase include ____-____ ____ (e.g., relaxation, pleasant imagery, arranging “escape routes”) and ____ ____ (e.g., replacing negative self-statements with coping self-statements).

A

Skills Acquisition and Rehearsal Phase; Direct-Action Techniques; Cognitive Techniques

43
Q

Stress Inoculation phase c) In the ____ ____ and ____-____ ____, the client applies the coping skills they have acquired to imagined, filmed, and in vivo stress-producing situations.

A

Final Application and Follow-Through Phase

44
Q

____-____ ____ was originally described by D’Zurilla and Goldfried (1971) and has been updated several times.

A

Problem-Solving Therapy (PST)

45
Q

PSTs most recent version proposes that problem-solving outcomes are determined primarily by two factors: ____ ____ refers to relatively stable cognitive schemas that can be either positive or negative and that represent the person’s views about problems and their ability to successfully solve them. ____-____ ____ refers to the activities the individual engages in when solving problems.

A

Problem Orientation; Problem-Solving Style

46
Q

PST distinguishes between rational, impulsive/careless, and avoidance styles, with the rational style being identified as the only one that’s likely to result in adaptive problem solutions. It’s characterized by a reliance on five skills –

A

recognizing the problem (problem orientation), defining the problem, generating alternative solutions, choosing the best solution, and implementing and evaluating the chosen solution.

47
Q

In therapy, several strategies are used to help clients adopt a ____ ____-____ ____ and ____ ____-____ ____ including psychoeducation, guided discussion, role-playing, and homework assignments.

A

Positive Problem-Solving Orientation; Rational Problem-Solving Style

48
Q

Rehm’s (1977) ____-____ ____ is a brief form of therapy that is usually conducted as group therapy. It’s based on the assumption that deficits in three aspects of self-control increase a person’s vulnerability to ____ and make it difficult to deal effectively with depressive symptoms.

A

Self-Control Therapy; Depression

49
Q

Self-Monitoring

A

People with depression selectively attend to negative events and to the immediate (versus delayed) consequences of their behavior.

50
Q

Self-Evaluation

A

People who are depressed make inaccurate internal attributions and compare their behavior to standards that are excessively rigid and perfectionistic.

51
Q

Self-Reinforcement

A

People with depression engage in low rates of self-reward and high rates of self-punishment.

52
Q

Therapy sessions and behavioral homework assignments correspond to the three aspects of self-control During the self-monitoring phase of therapy, the client is taught to ____ ____ ____-____ and ____ ____; and, during the self-evaluation phase, they are taught to set ____ ____ and to make ____ ____ for their behaviors. Then during the self-reinforcement phase, the client learns to ____ themselves with ____ ____-____ and ____ for working toward or achieving their goals.

A

Monitor Negative Self-Statements and Positive Outcomes; Realistic Goals; Appropriate Attributions; Reinforce; Positive Self-Statements and Activities

53
Q

____ (1974) ____ ____ attributes depression to a low rate of response-contingent reinforcement due to inadequate reinforcing stimuli in the environment and/or the individual’s lack of skill in obtaining reinforcement.

A

Lewinsohn’s Behavioral Model

54
Q

According to Lewinsohn, when a person’s behaviors (for instance, attempts to interact with family members or co-workers) are not reinforced, those behaviors ____. He also proposed that, in addition to eliminating or reducing certain behaviors, a ____ ____ of ____-____ ____ elicits ____, ____ ____-____, and other features tat are associated with depression.

A

Extinguish; Low Rate of Response-Contingent Reinforcement; Pessimism, Low Self-Esteem

55
Q

In terms of treatment, Lewinsohn initially focused on “____” depressed patients by increasing their activity levels and access to reinforcing events but subsequently incorporated ____ ____ like those developed by Beck. Interestingly, however, there has been a renewed interest in recent years in ____ ____ approaches for depression that utilize ____ ____ ____.

A

Reactivation; Cognitive Techniques; Behavioral Activation; Behavioral Strategies Only

56
Q

The ____-____ ____ encompass a variety of techniques that emphasize the client’s responsibility for modifying their own behavior. These procedures include ____-____, ____ ____, and ____ as well as several of the previously-described techniques, including self-instruction and thought stopping.

A

Self-Management Procedures; Self-Monitoring, Stimulus Control, and Biofeedback

57
Q

____-____ is a common initial procedure in self-management programs and other cognitive-behavioral interventions and involves having the client record information about the frequency and conditions surrounding the target behavior.

A

Self-Monitoring

58
Q

The results of self-monitoring provide the therapist and client with information about the ____ and ____ of the ____ so that an appropriate treatment strategy can be ____, and the effects of the treatment can be ____. Because self-monitoring often changes the nature of the target behavior in the ____ ____, it’s often used not only as an assessment tool but also to ____ ____ ____.

A

Nature; Magnitude of the Behavior; Developed; Evaluated; Desired Direction; Promote Behavior Change

59
Q

Behavior is said to be under ____ ____ when its performance is contingent on the presence of certain stimuli. Cigarette smoking, for example, may be controlled by several phenomena including coffee drinking, talking with friends, being alone, and the presence of a “no smoking” sign.

A

Stimulus Control

60
Q

The stimulus control techniques are designed to ____ the ____ ____ ____ and the ____ and/or its ____ and include a) ____ involves restricting the target behavior to a limited set of stimuli (eating only at mealtimes). b) ____ ____ entails linking the behavior to specific environmental conditions (studying in a particular location at home). C) ____ consists of changing the stimulus conditions associated with the behavior (replacing a fetish object with more appropriate sexual stimuli).

A

Alter the Associations Between Stimuli; Behavior; Consequences; Narrowing; Cue Strengthening; Fading

61
Q

____ may be classified as a self-management technique since it involves having a client learn to modify their own behaviors and, like many other self-management procedures, is based on the principles of operant conditioning.

A

Biofeedback

62
Q

The target in biofeedback training is usually a ____ ____ that is considered ____ such as heart rate, GSR, skin temperature, brain wave activity, or blood glucose level. When using this technique, the client is connected to an ____, ____, or other apparatus that provides immediate and continuous performance feedback about the target response, usually in the form of a ____ or ____ single.

A

Physiological Response; Involuntary; Electromyography (EMG); Electroencephalograph (EEG); Visual or Auditory

63
Q

___ ____ is often used to treat tension headaches and involves training the person to relax the frontalis muscle in the forehead. When they do so, ____ ____ is provided.

A

EMG Feedback; Immediate Feedback

64
Q

Evaluation: Several studies have found ____ ____ to be as effective as biofeedback for several problems including tension headaches, hypertension, general anxiety, insomnia, and lower back pain.

A

Relaxation Training

65
Q

There is evidence, that ____ may be the treatment-of-choice for some disorders. For example, ____ (____-____) ____ has been identified as an effective treatment for Raynaud’s disease, which is characterized by a decrease in blood supply to the fingers and toes, while ____ ____ (____) ____ has been successfully used to treat certain types of urinary and fecal incontinence. In addition, a combination of ____ ____ and ____ ____ (a relaxation technique) has been found to be the best approach for migraine headaches.

A

Biofeedback; Thermal (Skin-Temperature) Biofeedback; Pelvic Muscle (EMG) Biofeedback; Thermal Biofeedback and Autogenic Training

66
Q

Rational-emotive behavior (REBT) therapy conceptualizes behavior in terms of an “A-B-C chain” where A is an external even, B is the individual’s 1) ____, and C is the 2) ____. In other words, an emotional or behavioral response to an event (A) is due to 3) ____ about that event rather than to the event itself.

A

1) beliefs about A; 2) emotional or behavioral result of B; 3) beliefs

67
Q

Becks’ cognitive therapy (CT) focuses on the impact of various cognitive phenomena on emotions and behaviors. Cognitive 4) ____ are structures and rules that determine how people codify, categorize, and interpret their experiences. They develop early in life and may be dormant until they’re activated by 5) ____. 6) ____ are “surface level cognitions” that interceded between an event and a person’s emotional or behavioral response to that event; while 7) ____ are systematic errors in information processing that link maladaptive cognitive schemas and negative automatic thought. They include 8) ____, which involves drawing conclusions without corroborative evidence, and 9) ____, which involves attending to details while ignoring the total context. According to Beck, each psychological disorder is characterized by a different cognitive profile. Depression, for example, involves the cognitive triad of negative view of oneself, the world and the 10) ____.

A

; 4) schemas; 5) internal or external stress; 6) automatic thoughts; 7) cognitive distortions; 8) arbitrary inference; 9) selective abstraction; 10) future

68
Q

The primary goal of CT is to modify the client’s dysfunctional beliefs and assumptions. This is achieved through the development of a 11) ____ therapist-client relationship and the use of a broad range of cognitive and behavioral techniques. 12) ____ dialogue (questioning) is used to help the client reach logical conclusions about their problem. An early homework assignment requires the client to keep a Daily Record of 13) ____.

A

11) collaborative; 12) Socratic; 13) Dysfunctional Thoughts

69
Q

Self-instructional training was originally used to help impulsive ad hyperactive children perform tasks more successfully. It involves five stages: cognitive modeling, 14) ____, overt self-instruction, fading over self-instruction, and 15) ____. 16) ____ is used to eliminate obsessive ruminations, self-criticism, and other unwanted thought and involves such techniques as covertly yelling “stop!” or snapping a rubber band placed around the wrist. The goal of attribution retraining is to help clients attribute their failures to 17) ____ factors.

A

14) cognitive participant modeling; 15) covert self-instruction 16) Thought stopping; 17) external, unstable, and specific

70
Q

Stress inoculation was designed to help people deal with stressful events by increasing their coping skills. It includes three stages: cognitive preparation, 18) ____, and application and follow-though. According to Rehm, depression is related to deficits in self-monitoring, 19) ____, and self-reinforcement. Lewinsohn’s behavioral model attributes depression to a low rate of 20) ____.

A

18) skills acquisition and rehearsal; 19) self-evaluation; 20) response-contingent reinforcement

71
Q
A

21) promoting behavior change; 22) stimulus control; 23) relaxation training; 24 Raynaud’s; 25) autogenic training