32 results
Search Results
2. INDIVIDUAL THERAPY WITH A "DEFECTIVE DELINQUENT".
- Author
-
Friedman, Erwin
- Subjects
CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,COLONIZATION ,CRIMINALS ,COUNSELING - Abstract
The paper offers a case study with a defective delinquent who was rehabilitated through intensive individual psychotherapy. The subject was selected by the staff of a large colony for male defectives as belonging to the group of "incorrigible" defective delinquents. The procedure of selection and the results of a large scale counseling and psychotherapy program have been described elsewhere. One to three therapeutic sessions of 20-50 minutes each were held weekly for 18 months except for vacation.
- Published
- 1961
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. SOME VARIABLES RELATED TO OUTCOME OF PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Myers, Jerome K. and Auld Jr., Frank
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL psychology ,FEAR of success ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
The article informs that the selection and validation of criteria to measure psychotherapeutic experience are important problems in current research. In an increasing number of studies the utility of psychological tests as guides to selection of suitable patients for psychotherapy is being investigated. Although the validation of such tests rests, to a large degree, upon the adequate measurement of the success or failure of the patient's therapeutic experience, insufficient research has been directed towards this area. The present paper reports on an empirical investigation of the relationship between the manner in which therapy is terminated and length of treatment and training and experience of the therapist.
- Published
- 1955
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. THE PROGNOSTIC INDEX.
- Author
-
Teorne, Frederick C.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHIATRY ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS ,PUBLIC institutions ,EDUCATION - Abstract
The article reports that in the field of psychotherapy, there has been practically no progress in the matter of evaluating the relative efficacy of various methods because of failure to quantify the nature and malignancy of the clinical case materials under study. Adherents of various schools of psychotherapy have made a large number of claims and counter claims which cannot be proved or disproved until the exact nature of the clinical material on which the findings are based has been established. It is the purpose of this paper to outline a method for quantifying the malignancy of case materials by the use of a rating scale which has been called the prognostic index.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. DIRECTIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY: XV. PRESSURE AND COERCION.
- Author
-
Thorne, Frederick C.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHIATRY ,DIRECT action ,PERSONALITY - Abstract
This article discusses directive psychotherapy. The purpose of, this paper is to discuss the nature, indications and contraindications of methods of therapy involving pressure or coercion. Pressure is defined as the bringing to bear upon the client of stimulation tending to direct action toward specific goals. Coercion involves restraint or regulation by force, usually by law or authority, compelling or constraining the! client to comply with directions. Pressure will usually involve influences which leave ultimate responsibility for conformance up to the client himself, while coercion requires mandatory conformance.
- Published
- 1948
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. THE PATIENT AS A CONSTANT IN PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Korner, Isa N., Allison Jr., Roger B., Beier, Ernst, Broberg, Carolyn, and Zwanziger, Max
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPIST-patient relations ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,INDIVIDUAL differences ,RESEARCH ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL sociology - Abstract
The article presents information on the patient as a constant in psychotherapy. It demonstrates a procedure which enables certain aspects of the psychotherapeutic process to be held constant by using a highly resistant patient. Experimental studies of characteristics of therapists and observers are then possible. In terms of this study, each therapist had his own style and method which was little influenced by conscious attempts to standardize technique. There were individual differences in regard to the degree to which a therapist could alter his approach to the patient. Some tried hard to return occasionally to the agreed upon approach. Others acted as if there never had been any discussion or agreement on the subject.
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. PATIENT'S EXPECTANCIES AND NON-SPECIFIC TFIERAPY AS A BASIS FOR (UN)SPONTANEOUS REMISSION.
- Author
-
Goldstein, Arnold P.
- Subjects
THERAPEUTICS ,PATIENTS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MENTAL health counseling ,CLINICAL sociology ,SYMPTOMS ,PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
The article attempts to demonstrate the un-spontaneous basis for what heretofore has been termed "spontaneous" remission. Evidence is presented that a combination of favorable patient expectancies and such nonspecific professional intervention as the intake interview and psychological testing are sufficient for inducing symptomatic change in individuals waiting to participate in formal psychotherapy. Finally, it is suggested that "non-specific therapy remission" be substituted for "spontaneous remission" as a means of describing improvement in wait-list patients not participating in formal psychotherapy.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. DEVELOPMENT OF A SCALE TO MEASURE PROCESS CHANGES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Walker, Alan M., Rablen, Richard A., and Rogers, Carl R.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHIATRY ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS ,COUNSELING ,CLINICAL psychology - Abstract
The article describes the application of a scale for the objective assessment of process or movement in psychotherapy and reports the degree of reliability and validity found in a preliminary investigation. The present scale represents a refinement of the original scale based upon further analysis and study of additional therapy protocols. It seems apparent that satisfactory interjudge reliability can be obtained in using the process scale in its present form, and that ratings derived from it bear a meaningful relationship to other measures of successful change in therapy.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A PRELIMINARY STUDY OF FRUSTRATION REACTIONS OF THE POST-POLIOMYELITIC.
- Author
-
Wendland, Leonard V.
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRIC research ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,PHILOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The article compares a group of 82 post-poliomyelitic subjects on the Rosenzweig P-F Study with Rosenzweig's normative group. Some differences between the post-poliomyelitic group and the Rosenzweig normative group were found at statistically significant levels which at best indicate trends because of the size of the sample. When the postapoliomyelitic male is compared with Rosenzweig's normative group he may be described as one who is less Extrapunitive, more Intropunitive and more Impunitive than the male of the normative group.
- Published
- 1954
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. GROUP STRUCTURES IN GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Luchins, Abraham S.
- Subjects
GROUP psychotherapy ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PATIENTS ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
This article focuses on group structures in group psychotherapy. The group psychotherapy programs used in these hospitals, as in most contemporary programs, did not start by placing patients in already existing groups, e.g., a family or a club. At the onset there existed only an assemblage of patients, brought together by their doctors' orders and held together by ward attendants and the confines of the room. During the first session, some patients read, some sat listlessly with eyes wandering aimlessly about the room, while others buried their heads in their arms.
- Published
- 1947
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Relationships between Technique and Theory in Child Therapy.
- Author
-
Koehler, Ruth T.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST-patient relations ,CLINICAL sociology ,CHILD psychology ,THERAPEUTICS ,DOMESTIC relations ,SOCIAL impact ,SOCIAL factors ,SOCIAL status - Abstract
Psychotherapy with individual patients is central to the objective of resolving children's psychological problems. Clarification is needed of the term "psychotherapy" and of the field it encompasses. The relationship between psychotherapy and the patient's environment is considered, and the importance of transference in the patient-therapist relationship is illustrated by the case history of a child receiving therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1964
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. EFFECTS OF THE THERAPEUTIC CONDITIONS OF ACCURATE EMPATHY, NON-POSSESSIVE WARMTH, AND GENUINENESS ON HOSPITALIZED MENTAL PATIENTS DURING GROUP THERAPY.
- Author
-
Truax, Charles B., Wittmer, Joe, and Wargo, Donald G.
- Subjects
GROUP psychotherapy ,PEOPLE with mental illness ,CLINICAL sociology ,HOSPITAL patients ,SOCIAL psychology ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article highlights the effects of the therapeutic conditions of accurate empathy, non-possessive warmth, and genuineness on hospitalized mental patients during therapy. The findings tend to support the original hypothesis indicating a positive relationship between level of conditions offered during group psychotherapy and degree of therapeutic outcome. Since the hospitalized patients themselves were primarily diagnosed as schizophrenic, the significant change on the subjects subscales is of particular relevance. Also, as can be seen, patients who received relatively low levels of conditions, as a group, showed negative or deteriorative change on the subjects scale, whereas patients receiving high levels of conditions showed positive change on the subjects scale.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. DEGREE OF NEGATIVE TRANSFERENCE OCCURRING IN GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPY AND CLIENT OUTCOME IN JUVENILE DELINQUENTS.
- Author
-
Truax, Charles B.
- Subjects
GROUP psychotherapy ,JUVENILE offenders ,CLINICAL sociology ,TEENAGERS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article highlights the degree of negative transference occurring in group psychotherapy and client outcome in juvenile delinquents. The results suggest that the occurrence of negative transference in group psychotherapy with juvenile delinquents is associated with positive therapeutic benefit. Further, the degree of occurrence of negative transference in juvenile delinquents had no differential effects whether the therapist was high or low in empathy, warmth, or genuineness. Moreover, it is to at least some degree the therapist who is more open, non-defensive, real or genuine who facilitates the expression of negative transference. Juvenile delinquents typically have difficulty in relating to authority figures.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. THE THERAPIST'S FEELINGS IN THE THERAPEUTIC PROCESS.
- Author
-
Howard, Kenneth I., Orlinsky, David E., and Hill, James A.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPIST-patient relations ,EMOTIONS ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,PATIENTS - Abstract
The article investigates the feelings of therapists in the therapeutic process. This study was concerned with what therapists typically feel in psychotherapy sessions, what the structure of these feelings was, and how these feeling clusters were related to the patient's experience. In general, salient therapist feelings were role-syntonic. There were nine dimensions of therapist affective experience and some of these were related to patient experiences. The value of these relationships as practical cues and for a greater understanding of psychotherapy process are discussed.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. OPENDOOR THERAPY: A NEW APPROACH TO THE TREATMENT OF UNDERACHIEVING ADOLESCENT BOYS WHO RESIST NEEDED PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Coleman, James C. and Hewett, Frank M.
- Subjects
CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHIATRY ,THERAPEUTICS ,LEARNING disabilities - Abstract
This article describes, and attempts a preliminary assessment of, a new approach to the treatment of underachieving adolescent boys who resist needed psychotherapy. It would appear most economical to briefly describe the remedial clinic setting in which this investigation took place, and then to proceed to a consideration of method and results. The Clinic School, established in 1921, on the campus of the University of California, Los Angeles, is a remedial center providing facilities for: the diagnostic psychological assessment of children with severe learning disorders, the treatment of a limited number of such children, either in the full-day remedial school program or in the part-time tutoring program, and training and research.
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. THE ROLE OF THE PSYCHOLOGIST ON MENTAL HOSPITAL WARDS AS DEFINED BY THE EXPECTANT-OTHERS.
- Author
-
Ishiyama, Toaru, Denny, James M., Prada, Raymond, and Vespe, Raymond
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGISTS ,BEHAVIORAL scientists ,THERAPEUTICS ,PHYSICIANS ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHIATRY - Abstract
The article reports that the utilization of psychologists as administrators of psychiatric wards or as members of ward treatment teams has led to the need to scrutinize and to reformulate the role of the psychologist. Whether the psychologist partly assumes the role of a ward psychiatrist, or whether he becomes a member of a ward team, changes in functions, attitudes and perceptions, and role-definition are inevitable. The traditional functions of psychodiagnostic testing, research, and psychotherapy developed by the psychologist are inexorably modified by the demands of the ward and team setting. The ward psychologist has no precedents to follow.
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. IMMEDIACY IN TIME ATTITUDES BEFORE AND AFTER TIME-LIMITED PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Gendlin, Eugene T. and Shlien, John M.
- Subjects
CLINICAL sociology ,REPETITION compulsion ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL medicine ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,IMPULSE (Psychology) - Abstract
The article informs that maladjustment has been explained as "repetition compulsion" or as the imposition of past perceptions upon present experience. Repetition of the past involves not only inaccurate perceptual content, but more especially a structure-bound manner of experiencing. There is experiencing of structures and patterns instead of the richly detailed immediacy of present events. It follows that immediacy of experiencing is a mark of adjustment. Increased immediacy of experiencing has also been viewed as inherent in the process of therapy.
- Published
- 1961
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. AN EXPERIMENTAL ANALOGUE OF THREE PSYCHOTHERAPEUTIC APPROACHES.
- Author
-
Dinoff, M., Rickard, B. C., Salzberg, H., and Sipprelle, C. N.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS ,PATIENTS ,PSYCHOTHERAPISTS ,MENTAL health personnel - Abstract
The article attempts to set up models of therapeutic situations in which analogues to several different therapeutic approaches might be examined. For example, if the patient and therapist concentrate on the environment, the nature of the environment, the forces at work in the environment, and other general environmental factors, it can be seen that particular therapeutic approach is quite similar to the approach classically practiced by the social or guidance worker. The study suggests that the categories of response concern primarily with the environment, the subject, and the examiner can be rated reliably and offer a potential tool for further research in the area of psychotherapy.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A HOMOSEXUAL TREATED WITH RATIONAL PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Ellis, Albert
- Subjects
CLINICAL psychology ,GAY people ,PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL sociology - Abstract
This article reports on a homosexual who was treated with rational psychotherapy. The client was a thirty-five year old male, living in Brooklyn with his parents, and operating his disabled father's toy factory. He had been raised as a Catholic, but no longer considered himself a believer. He was the only son of what he described as a "very religious and very neurotic" mother and an "exceptionally weak, dome mated father" who had been disabled by a serious stroke two years before the client came for treatment. He had always been quite close to his mother, and usually did her bidding, even though he bitterly resented her persistent attempts to control himself and his father.
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. SUGGESTIBILITY, SOCIAL CLASS AND THE ACCEPTANCE OF PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Imber, Stanley D., Frank, Jerome D., Gliedman, Lester H., Nash, Earl H., and Stone, Anthony R.
- Subjects
CLINICAL psychology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHIATRY ,THERAPEUTICS ,COMMUNITY health services - Abstract
This article focuses on social class and the acceptance of psychotherapy. The patient source was the Out-patient Department of the Henry Phipps Psychiatric Clinic, Johns Hopkins Hospital, a training institution and community clinic offering various types of psychotherapy. A total of 57 patients who met the qualifications specified below were included in the study. All patients were between the age of 18 and 55 years and their diagnoses were either psychoneurosis or some form of personality disorder. Specifically excluded were patients with a diagnosis of organic brain disease, anti-social character disorder, alcoholism, overt psychosis, or mental deficiency.
- Published
- 1956
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A METHODOLOGY FOR MEASURING PERSONALITY CHANGES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Leary, Timothy and Harvey, Joan S.
- Subjects
PERSONALITY change ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,MENTAL health services ,PSYCHIATRY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article discusses a methodology for measuring personality changes in psychotherapy. Psychotherapy has existed and flourished during the past five decades in spite of the fact that it remains almost completely unvalidated by scientific standards. Psychotherapy is, in some respects, an implausible procedure offering to the individual the opportunity to learn those things about himself which by definition he does not wish to know. The methodology for measuring changes before and after psychotherapy is based on the Interpersonal System. This system involving a complex combination of formal and empirical operations has been described elsewhere.
- Published
- 1956
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN FOR RESEARCH IN PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Edwards, Allen L. and Cronbach, Lee J.
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,IDEALS (Psychology) ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article reports that special problems do arise in psychotherapy, one of which, for example, relates to the independent-variable complex. Either it is true that more variables interact in individual therapeutic treatment than is customary in experimental psychology, or that we are at present unable to specify the independent variables which account for response to treatment. Thus a study of psychotherapy cannot rule out a host of disturbing variables in order to concentrate on the significance of one or two. There is no prospect of rising to the level of the rat psychologist's control, where he gets rid of a great deal of genetic variability, for example, by drawing his animals from one purified strain. One of our concerns will be to state how, if at all, such special problems modify the use of formal design in research on therapy.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. MEASURES BEFORE AND AFTER THERAPY.
- Author
-
Berg, Irwin A.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHIATRY ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL psychology ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests - Abstract
The article reports that studies of the effectiveness of counseling and psychotherapy have used a variety of criteria as measures of success. Some researches have employed rating scales of differing degrees of elegance, others have relied upon psychological tests, while still others have emphasized physiological and environmental measurements. The behavior measured in such studies was sometimes quite specific, as changes in respiration or pulse rates, and sometimes very broad and elusive such as changes in sell concept. The therapeutic methods employed ranged from directive through eclectic and nondirective procedures. In every case the attempt was made in the approaches discussed here to measure the clients' status before therapy, after therapy, and in some studies, during therapy.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODOLOGY IN EVALUATING THE RESULTS OF PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Watson, Robert I.
- Subjects
CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTICS ,INTEREST (Psychology) ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The article reports that before dealing critically with the present status of research in this field we may consider briefly certain of the difficulties facing a research worker in this area. The most obvious source of difficulty is the presence of various systematic approaches to psychotherapy psychoanalytic, nondirective and so on. Each of these points of view may become proliferated by defections from the ranks. In addition, there are the minor unorthodoxies and individual idiosyncracies within the fold which still further complicate the issue. One cannot speak of the "effects of psychotherapy" in a bald unqualified fashion, but research must be framed in terms of a particular approach to psychotherapy with attention to the particular individual nuances given by the specific practioners concerned.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. ON TRAINING CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS IN PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Luchins, Abraham S.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,MENTAL health personnel ,CLINICAL sociology ,MENTAL health services ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
This article focuses on the training clinical psychologists in psychotherapy. It seems that a training program in therapy for psychologists must accept the premise that psychotherapy can be treated as a discipline in its own right, that it need not be viewed as necessarily an adjurict of medical training. Furthermore, the training program must recognize that while its existence as a stopgap or expediency measure can be justified by the present critical shortage of psychiatrists, any long-range, inherent justification can result only if the psychologist-therapist is prepared to make a unique contribution to the field of therapy, if he can complement the work of the psychiatrist rather than be his professional competitor.
- Published
- 1949
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A CRITIQUE OF THE THEORETICAL CONTRIBUTIONS OF NON-DIRECTIVE THERAPY.
- Author
-
Ellis, Albert
- Subjects
CLIENT-centered psychotherapy ,CLINICAL sociology ,THEORY of knowledge ,PSYCHOTHERAPISTS ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
The article presents information on a critique of the theoretical contributions of non-directive therapy. Although non-directive therapists may have only recently rediscovered this point, it has been basic to virtually every other major kind of therapy for many decades. This an excellent statement of an important aspect of the dynamics of psychotherapy; the one serious flaw being that the term "client-centered therapy" is meant only to include "non-directive" therapy; and the implication being that all other kinds of therapy are non-client-centered and directive.
- Published
- 1948
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. DIRECTIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY: VI. THE TECHNIQUE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL PALLIATION.
- Author
-
Thorne, Frederick C.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PALLIATIVE treatment ,SYMPTOMS ,PSYCHIATRY ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL sociology - Abstract
The article outlines some theoretical and practical considerations concerning the use of palliative methods in psychotherapy. The general purpose of palliation is to reduce the severity or otherwise alleviate the client's complaints or symptoms, affording relief but not cure, and thereby facilitating normal reparative processes by providing optimum conditions for cure. Palliative methods are indicated in (a) major crises in adjustment where emotional instability or other distressing symptoms require immediate action to tide the client over his climax of troubles, (b) transient periods of instability where maladjustment is a direct reaction to environmental stress and the client is basically normal and healthy, (c) situations impossible of satisfactory solution, and (d) for the treatment and relief of distressing symptoms which must be attended to before more basic therapy can be effectively attempted.
- Published
- 1946
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. THE DYNAMICS OF NON-DIRECTIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Meister, Ralph K. and Millier, Jielen E.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,COUNSELOR-client relationship ,PSYCHIATRY ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,THERAPEUTICS ,CLINICAL sociology - Abstract
The article focuses on non-directive psychotherapy, which is entirely new conception of the dynamics of psychotherapy. It does not rest upon the old conceptions that the counselor must secure enough information about the client to interpret the client to himself and finally force this interpretation upon the client in such a way that the client accepts this interpretation and acts upon it. Therapy is effected in a non-directive relationship by placing the client in an accepting environment, in a situation where he is permitted to make the beginnings of a new and better adjustment and it is from this seedling adjustment that his latter total readjustment eventuates. Hence, this theory of the dynamics of psychotherapy constitutes a definitely new system, not merely a new method of psychotherapy.
- Published
- 1946
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. AN ILLUSTRATION OF NON-DIRECTIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Madigan, Virginia E.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CLINICAL sociology ,COUNSELOR-client relationship ,COUNSELING ,PSYCHIATRY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
This article focuses on non-directive psychotherapy. While in the beginning or initial contact the structuring is verbal, the most significant aspect of this process is the subtle experiencing by the client of the counselor's permissiveness and complete acceptance. He experiences too the limits of the situation and of the relationship. As he is able to accept and assimilate these limits, he experiences growth in independence and ability to follow through in his role as a responsible participant in the counseling.
- Published
- 1945
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A STUDY OF FACTORS RELATED TO LENGTH OF STAY IN PSYCHOTHERAPY.
- Author
-
Bailey, M. A., Wabshaw, L., and Eichler, R. M.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHOSOMATIC medicine ,MENTAL health ,CLINICAL psychology ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The article discusses a study of factors related to length of stay in psychotherapy. A previous investigation revealed that the patients applying for treatment in the Mental Hygiene Clinic of the New York Regional Office are representative of the veteran population in the greater New York area for most demographic characteristics. However, assignment to psychotherapy was found to be related to normative data indicative of high socio-economic status, intrapyschic complaints, youth, and expressed desire for psychotherapy, recommendations from psychological test evaluation and previous treatment. The present investigation is designed to determine whether the above and other demographic criteria for assignment are related to length of stay in psychotherapy or in psychosomatic treatment.
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. THE EFFECT OF VERBAL CONDITIONING OF EMOTIONAL WORDS ON RECOGNITION OF THREATENING STIMULI.
- Author
-
Ullmann, Leonard P., Weiss, Robert L., and Krasner, Leonard
- Subjects
CONDITIONED response ,BEHAVIORISM (Psychology) ,THERAPEUTICS ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,CLINICAL sociology ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,SELECTIVITY (Psychology) - Abstract
The article discusses the effect of verbal conditioning of emotional words on recognition of threatening stimuli. In line with previous work in which the verbal conditioning of emotional words had been found to have a beneficial effect on hospitalized psychiatric subjects' behavior in group therapy, it was hypothesized that verbal conditioning of emotional words would be associated with reduced defense scores. Of primary importance to psychologists studying psychotherapy is that their manipulations of the psychological environment be associated with predictable, measurable, and meaningful changes in subjects' behavior. This study adds lowered perceptual defense to improved group therapy behavior as a criterion associated with reinforcement of emotional words. Thirty-two psychiatric patients receiving reinforcement for emotional words prior to taking a perceptual defense test (PDT) composed of matched pairs of threatening and neutral words, had lower PDT scores than 32 controls who took the PDT without prior verbal conditioning.
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Operational Values in Psychotherapy.
- Subjects
PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CLINICAL sociology ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
This article focuses on the book "Operational Values in Psychotherapy," by Donald D. Glad. This thoughtful book may well mark the beginning of a new era in the scientific study of psychotherapy since it makes the first systematic attempt to analyse the operations inherent in four major schools of psychiatric thought.
- Published
- 1959
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.