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Browsing Psychology - Faculty Research by Title
Now showing items 21-40 of 221
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Self-Stigma Around Sexual Orientation: A Multiple Baseline Evaluation
(2012)This study evaluated the effectiveness of 6 to 10 sessions of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for self-stigma around sexual orientation linked to same-sex attraction (what has generally been referred to as internalized ... -
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy modules: Differential impact on treatment processes and outcomes
(2016)A modular, transdiagnostic approach to treatment design and implementation may increase the public health impact of evidence-based psychosocial interventions. Such an approach relies on algorithms for selecting and ... -
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Relational Frame Theory, and the third wave of behavioral and cognitive therapies
(2004)The first wave of behavior therapy countered the excesses and scientific weakness of existing nonempirical clinical traditions through empirically studied first-order change efforts linked to behavioral principles targeting ... -
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Acceptance and commitment therapy: Model, processes and outcomes
(2006)The present article presents and reviews the model of psychopathology and treatment underlying Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). ACT is unusual in that it is linked to a comprehensive active basic research program ... -
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Towards a unified model of behavior change
(2018)Well-established research programs should be evaluated relative to progress toward their stated purposes. The 35-year old program of development of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT; said as a word, not initials) ... -
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Acceptance and commitment therapy: towards a unified model of behavior change
(Wiley, 2019)Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) is based on the psychological flexibility model. This short article summarizes the current empirical status of ACT and ints underlying model and argues that it provides a unified ... -
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Acceptance and commitment: Implications for prevention science
(2008)Recent research in behavior analysis and clinical psychology points to the importance of language processes having to do with the control of negative cognition and emotion and the commitment to valued action. Efforts to ... -
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Acceptance, mindfulness, and science
(2002)The inclusion of technologies drawn from spiritual and religious traditions into empirical clinical psychology is a positive step forward, but it also helps reveal problems in the technological model of treatment development. ... -
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Acceptance-based treatment for smoking cessation
(2004)This pilot study applied a theoretically derived model of acceptance-based treatment process to smoking cessation, and compared it to a pharmacological treatment based on a medical dependence model. Seventy-six nicotine-dependent ... -
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Age-Related Changes in Sensorimotor Temporal Binding
(2017)The causal relationship between a voluntary movement and a sensory event is crucial for experiencing agency. Sensory events must occur within a certain delay from a voluntary movement to be perceived as self-generated. ... -
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An examination of the Motivational Interviewing Treatment Integrity Code
(2007)This study examines the reliability of the Motivational Inter-viewing Treatment Integrity (MITI) code, a brief scale designed to evaluate the integrity of the use of motivational interviewing (MI). Interactions between ... -
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An investigation of stigma in individuals receiving treatment for substance abuse
(2007)This study examined the impact of stigma on patients in substance abuse treatment. Patients (N= 197) from fifteen residential and outpatient substance abuse treatment facilities completed a survey focused on their experiences ... -
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Applying acceptance, mindfulness, and values to the reduction of prejudice - A pilot study
(2007)Two classroom approaches to reducing racial and ethnic prejudice among college students were compared: a class session based on acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) and an educational lecture drawn from a textbook on ... -
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Arbitrarily applicable comparative relations: Experimental evidence for a relational operant
(2007)Arbitrarily applicable derived relational responding has been argued by relational frame theorists to be a form of operant behavior. The present study examined this idea with 4 female participants, ages 4 to 5 years old, ... -
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Assessing referrals for pharmacotherapy: A comparison of therapist and client report
(2007)The primary goal of this study was to assess whether therapist self-reported use of referrals for pharmacotherapy with clients for the treatment of substance abuse disorders is consistent with actual rates of referrals ... -
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Assessing the field effectiveness of acceptance and commitment therapy: An example of the manipulated training research method
(1998)Health care reform and managed care have produced a growing emphasis on field effectiveness research. The present paper proposes a simple methodological model for conducting such research that can assimilate all of the ... -
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Asymmetric Effects of Luminance and Chrominance in the Watercolor Illusion
(2014)When bounded by a line of sufficient contrast, the desaturated hue of a colored line will spread over an enclosed area, an effect known as the watercolor illusion. The contrast of the two lines can be in luminance, ... -
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Attentional Capture for Tool Images is Driven by the Head End of the Tool, not the Handle
(Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2016)Tools afford specialized actions that are tied closely to object identity. Although there is mounting evidence that functional objects, such as tools, capture visuospatial attention relative to non-tool competitors, this ... -
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Atypical Asymmetry for Processing Human and Robot Faces in Autism Revealed by fNIRS
(2016)Deficits in the visual processing of faces in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) individuals may be due to atypical brain organization and function. Studies assessing asymmetric brain function in ASD individuals have suggested ...