YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Aspects of Cognitive Psychology
Essays 271 - 300
and the experiential. There was also a series of master clinician seminars and several institutes. Both the seminars and the insti...
Bowles & Skibbe, 2006). There are several cognitive assessment tests that can be used with preschoolers. These include the BSID-II...
The therapist used progressive relaxation, desensitization, psycho-education, and cognitive restructuring (Chaudhury et al., 2009)...
that Scheela supervised, she heard the gruesome details of the abuse that one member of the group endured as a child, as well as t...
participating in both family and social life in cognitive development (Sternberg and Kaufman, 1998; Sternberg, 2004). The Baoule p...
2006). Marcotte and colleagues (2002) note that a great deal of progress has been made in this field over the last two decades but...
reported that behavior therapy follows "a format of therapist modeling, behavior rehearsal, specific therapy assignments, self-rec...
styles of cognitive learning by offering both individual and group work to students. For instance, some of the assignments would b...
in which he or she is most vulnerable to drug use, avoid those high-risk situations whenever possible, and use a range of behavior...
and emotionally unbalancing illnesses they truly are to the adolescent population. Studies have pinpointed six cognitive elements...
differences between historians and biosciences, it would appear highly likely that there will be differences between accounting an...
had generalized anxiety disorder, and experienced symptoms of panic whenever exposed to triggers such as crowds or passing over br...
reinforced to continue a behavior. He and a collaborator discovered that if a child came from a home where hostility was demonstra...
The paper outlines this psychosis and the associated symptoms. The potential use of cognitive behavioural therapy to aid with the ...
disorder that is characterized by obsessions, i.e., thoughts, and/or compulsions, acts that must be done. The acts become rituals....
societal and academic endeavors" (Commons and Ross, 2008, p. 321). Piagets perspective on formal operations appears to have been ...
"behind their cute and seemingly illogical utterances were thought processes that had their own kind of order and their own specia...
care professionals and systems because of previous negative experiences. The literature emphasizes that all women, regardless of...
health services available to students. Changes over the years have diminished that role to the point of eliminating it in many sc...
frequently use mental health nurses as a means for expanding services (Winefield and Chur-Hansen, 2004). The following examination...
makes clear, efforts are needed in order to explore the reasons why African American adolescents often do not seek prenatal care a...
percentage of parents who lack the appropriate knowledge of how to raise an infant, often - if not unwittingly - ignoring the infa...
most pragmatic and meaningful of treatments in terms of how it shows where and how a person may have distorted thoughts regarding ...
is so obvious (Holme, 1972). As this Piaget experiment suggests a childs knowledge builds upon itself from experience and advances...
integrates what has been defined as "behavior modification techniques," or interventions that are introduced to break the cycle be...
emotional reaction to certain situations, and so listening becomes one of the fundamental tools in the learning of new skills (Sta...
who are raised in environments with little communication or input develop language in a different manner than children who experie...
the ordinary state of consciousness. While in a hypnotic state, a variety of phenomena can occur. These phenomena include alterati...
phonological skills would be stronger predictors than exception words (Griffiths and Snowling, 2003). They also hypothesized that ...