Title: Why Focus on Theory?
1Why Focus on Theory?
- Guide your interventions to be maximally
effective/efficient for unique clients and
situations - Empirical studies (and ESTs) are never sufficient
- can never be enough studies
- research findings always require interpretation
- there are always exceptions (moderators)
- Very often therapists need to improvise
- if fewer sessions than recommended
- if client does not respond to standard procedures
- if client does not cooperate (e.g., culture,
world-view) - if client has a problem not in DSM, atypical,
or NOS - Allows for technical eclecticism
- Orient clients (expectancies and collaboration)
2Becoming a Good Therapist
- Learn principles of behavior and behavior change
- Learn techniques, observe therapy
- Practice, practice, practice!
- Have CBT supervisors view your videotapes and
give you feedback - Incorporate new research (PSY6023)
3Specific things to learn
- How to do a thorough person-specific analysis of
proximal causes - Understand effective ways to change problematic
thinking and emotions - Understand treatment failures
- failures to generalize to real world
- return of problem behaviors/emotions
4What is Behaviorism?
- 1. Principles of learning derived from science
- 2. Does not acknowledge internal diseases
- 3. Leads to superficial change (symptom
substitution) - 4. A set of technical language that alienates
others - 5. It is coercive/controlling, limits free will
- 6. It oversimplifies human complexities
- 7. Is too deterministic, claiming that responses
are only determined by immediate stimuli (S-R) - 8. It feels dehumanizing, ignoring most thinking
and feeling and the uniqueness of each person
5Behaviorism Myths
- 3. Little evidence for symptom substitution
- 5. It is generally not coercive/controlling
- 5. It does not limit free will
- 6. Behavioral theory is complex in considering a
variety of causes including thinking - 7. No longer a stimulus-response theory
- 8. It does not have to feel dehumanizing, if so
it is based on your thinking and/or conditioning - 8. It does not ignore thinking and feeling and
very much considers uniqueness of each person
6Which Therapy Orientation?
- 1. Free association
- 2. Free responses to ambiguous auditory stimuli
- 3. Analysis of patients feelings toward therapist
and how they resemble feelings toward others
7The Functions of CBT
- 1. Increase abilities for effective behavior to
live a valued life - 2. Improve motivation and salience of true goals
- 3. Decrease thoughts/emotions that interfere with
effective behaviors or quality of life - 4. Increase distress tolerance and acceptance
- 5. Restructure the environment to promote
effective behaviors (antecedents and
consequences) - 6. Ensure generalization to natural environment
8What is CBT?
- Interventions guided by CBT theories
- Functional analysis
- Problem solving
- 1. Skills training
- 2. Cognitive modification
- 3. Exposure strategies
- 4. Mindfulness/meditation
- 5. Contingency management
- 6. Homework
9The Therapists Influence
- Verbal teaching (didactic/instruction)
- Modeling (intentional and inadvertent)
- Reinforcement and punishment
- verbal
- nonverbal (intentional and inadvertent)
- careful observation the counting horse
- natural versus arbitrary
10The Therapists Influence
- Modeling
- Negative judgment of others (validation)
- Positive judgment (praise)
- Failure model (validation)
- Reinforcement
- of judgment (by laughing)
- of self-criticism (by reassuring or praise)
- of suicidality (by providing more help)
11The Teachers Influence
- Verbal teaching (didactic/instruction)
- Modeling (intentional and inadvertent)
- Reinforcement and punishment
- Verbal
- Nonverbal (intentional and inadvertent)
12What are Effects of These Consequences?
- Praise
- Being yelled at and criticized
- Food
- Physical pain
- Fear
- Gaining weight (obesity)
- Time-out from recess (child)
- Beep (stacked squares) SEraser
13Function Varies Considerably
- Function (causal relations) depends on
- the disorder
- the person (genetics learning history)
- external context (physical or interpersonal)
- recent external events/stimuli
- internal context
- biological changes (e.g., hunger)
- emotions
- mental perspective or thinking
- drug intoxication
14What is CBT?
- Interventions based on a commitment to the
scientific analysis of - causes of psychopathology
- change strategies
- efficacy/effectiveness
- mechanisms of change
- operational definitions of causes, behaviors, and
change processes
15What is CBT?
- CBT is driven by science
- CBT is diverse and evolving
- CBT is active and collaborative
- self-monitoring
- learning new coping skills and behaviors
- practice in and out of sessions
16What is CBT?
- What is behavior therapy?
- What is radical behaviorism?
- What is (applied) behavior analysis?
- What is cognitive therapy?
- What is cognitive-behavior therapy?
- Whats the difference??
17History of CBTThe Pendulum Swings
- Introspection psychology problematic
- 1st wave of CBT
- Watson extreme behavioral
- Skinner radical behavioral, less extreme
- 2nd wave of CBT Cognitive revolution
- 3rd wave of CBT
- contextual approaches
- integrative approaches
18History of CBTYour Mentorship Lineage
- William James
- Albert Bandura (Stanford)
- Gerald Davison (USC)
- Marsha Linehan
- Milton Brown
- you
19Early Behavioral Theory
- Behavior is controlled by its Antecedents and
Consequences
20To a BehavioristAll forms of behavior can
cause other behaviorsCognitions are not
causes
21Stimulus Control
- Current stimuli can control current responses
- bell gt salivation
- white rat gt fear
- close gt contraction of pupils
- bedroom gt alertness anxietyworry
- being in any car gt sleepiness sleep
- size of plate gt amount of food eaten
- darkness (outside) gt TV (no chores)
21
22Stimulus Control
- Control responses by controlling antecedents
- remove conditioned stimuli
- remove discriminative stimuli
- remove opportunities to behave
- prevent problematic conditioning
- Examples
- remove binge foods (cigarettes) from home
- rearrange the space in which eating occurs
- rearrange the space in which person sleeps
- do not read or watch TV in bed
23Why the Cognitive Revolution?
- Evidence against behavioral theories
- lack of S-R consistencies between people
- individuals respond differently to same stimuli
- intermittent reinforcement effects
- observational learning
- cognitions/awareness correlate with learning
- cognitive dissonance effects
- overjustification effects (rewards)
24ABCs of Cognitive Therapy
- Thoughts and beliefs determine emotions and
behavior.
25ABCs of Cognitive Therapy
- Examples
- student getting bigger belly
- person hunched over at Home Depot saying Dont
kill yourself - letter from Board of Psychology
- at Target, I turned around and my daughter was
gone
26The Big Debate
The Role of Cognition (B) in Dysfunctional
Emotions and Behaviors (C)
27Cognitive Mediation of Emotions and Behaviors
28John Watsons Behaviorism
29Disadvantages of Early Models
- Insisting always cognitive mediation
- impedes search for other causes
- external antecedents/context
- cognitive learning in context
- role of mental context vs. cognitive content
- consequences for problem and target behaviors
- clients fabricate plausible thoughts
30Modern CBT Theory
31The Failure of Catharsis
32A Reformulation of Differences
- Pure Behavior Therapy
- John Watson (pure externalism)
- Behavioral-Cognitive Therapy
- B.F. Skinner (the least cognitive)
- Steven Hayes (contextual Skinnerian)
- Albert Bandura (50-50)
- Arthur Staats (50-50)
- Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (the most cognitive)
- Aaron T. Beck
- Albert Ellis (more behavioral than Beck)
33Three Ways to Reduce Suffering and Stop Problem
Behaviors
- 1. Change problematic thoughts
- 2. Reduce negative emotions
- 3. Change the way you relate to your thoughts and
emotions (internal context)
343rd Wave of CBT
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy
- Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy
- Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction
- Mindfulness-based Relapse Prevention
- Mindfulness-based Therapy for GAD
35Two Primary Forms of Learning
- 1. Classical (respondent) conditioning
- 2. Operant (instrumental) conditioning
- to help us effectively navigate our world
- make use of signals effectively prepare us for
important events and opportunities
36Two Primary Forms of Learning
- 1. Classical (respondent) conditioning
- 2. Operant (instrumental) conditioning
- Both usually co-occur and interact
- Both signals and responses
- can occur outside of awareness
- can be inside or outside the person
37Respondent Conditioning
- UCS important evocative stimuli, usually not
learned (e.g., injury or food) - UCR natural response to a UCS
- CS stimuli (usually neutral) that acquire
potential to elicit a new response - CR the learned response
38Respondent Conditioning
- Original Theory stimulus substitution
- A previously neutral stimulus functions as the
evocative stimulus with which it has been paired - The response transfers to the neutral stimulus
such that it is no loner neutral - The number temporal pairing of CS-UCS determines
the CR strength
39Pavlovian Experimental Apparatus
40Little Albert Experiment
41Respondent Conditioning
42Respondent Conditioning
- CS UCS UCR CR .
- T1 bell gt orienting
- T2 food gt salivation
- T3 bellfood gt salivation
- T4 bell gt salivation
- T1 rat gt orienting
- T2 noise gt startle/fear
- T3 rat noise gt startle/fear
- T4 rat gt fear/crying
43Generalization Gradient
44Respondent Conditioning
- Salivation can be conditioned to almost any
neutral stimulusbuzzers, lights, touches - One dog was conditioned to salivate when it
received an electric shock. At first the shock
was very weak so as to be barely perceptible. As
the shock was increased in strength it was found
that a very strong shock produced no sign of pain
or displeasure. There was no quickening of the
heartbeat or breathing which usually accompanies
an unpleasant event. Instead the shock was
followed by mouth-watering and tail wagging.
44
45Respondent Conditioning
- CS UCS UCR CR .
- T1 bell gt orienting
- T2 light gt pupils contract
- T3 belllight gt pupils contract
- T4 bell gt contraction
- CS can also be the spoken word contract, which
can cause the pupils to contract
46- Learning principles apply to both overt
- behaviors and private behaviors
- Internal/private stimuli can become CS
- thinking
- emotions
- heart beat
- reinforcement and punishment can alter
- internal responses
- thinking
- emoting
- involuntary or reflexive behaviors
- cough
- bruxism
46
47Verbal Conditioning
- Command your pupils to contract
- Command your temperature to drop
47
48Interoceptive Conditioning
- Exteroceptive conditioning
- Ex overtly spoken words CONTRACT
- Interoceptive conditioning
- Ex sub-vocal speech CONTRACT
48
49Rescorla-Wagner Theory
- Our brains are not stupid!!
- Conditioning is not simplistic.
- Conditioning effects depend on many factors
- based on what is useful
50Rescorla-Wagner Theory
- Conditioning is not a stupid process by which the
organism willy-nilly forms associations between
any two stimuli that happen to co-occur. Rather,
the organism is better seen as a strategic
information seeker striving to predict its world
to increase good outcomes and avoid harm. If one
thinks of classical conditioning as developing
between CS and US under just those circumstances
that would lead a scientist to conclude that the
CS causes the US, one has a surprisingly
successful heuristic for remembering the facts of
what it takes to produce associative learning.
51Rescorla-Wagner Theory
- Stimuli only become signals when
- they give the person time to prepare
- CS precedes the UCS (forward conditioning)
- meaningful associations form
- US-CS contingency is necessary (depends on)
- CS predicts that things will get better or worse
- US-CS contiguity is not sufficient
52US-CS Contiguity is Not Sufficient Contingency is
Necessary
- CS signal a change in the probability or severity
of a UCS - the UCS depends on the CS (to some extent)
- the UCS is contingent upon the CS
- expectation things will get better or worse
- Thus, no CR will develop if
- CS gt UCS frequently AND
- UCS occurs as frequently in the absence of the CS
52
53Rescorla-Wagner Theory
- Conditioning occurs when the organism is
surprised - and there are stimuli that can make the
surprising situation more predictable
(expectancies ifthen)
53
54US-CS Contiguity is Not Sufficient Contingency is
Necessary
54
55Behavior-Consequence Contiguity is Not Sufficient
Contingency is Necessary
55
56US-CS Contiguity is Not Sufficient for
Conditioning to Occur
56
57US-CS Contiguity is Not Sufficient for
Conditioning to Occur
57
58Outdated Theories ofRespondent Conditioning
- Stimulus substitution theory is limited
- CR often differs from UR
- sometimes CR is opposite to UR
- different CS (paired with same US) have different
CRs
59Outdated Theories ofRespondent Conditioning
- Different CS (associated with same US) have
different CRs - CS UCS CR / UCR
- shock quick burst of activity
- sound less activity
- visual evade/block
- food swallowing
- sound more activity (general)
- visual pecking
60Respondent Conditioning
- UCS CS UCR CR .
- heroin euphoria
- analgesia
- needle dysphoria
- garage hypergesia
- sad
- Interoceptive conditioning
60
61Respondent Conditioning of an Opponent Process
62Operant Conditioning
- Is a stimulus added or removed as a consequence?
- Does the behavior increase or decrease?
- add remove
- increase
- decrease
- Ex. negative reinforcement increase in the
probability of a behavior occurring in the future
when removing an aversive stimulus after the
behavior occurs.
63Two-Factor TheoryUCS are Primary Reinforcers
CS are Conditioned Reinforcers
- Antecedents
- sight of food (CS) elicits salivation
- sight of food (SD) elicits eating behavior
- Consequences
- food in mouth (UCS) elicits salivation (UCR)
- food in mouth (SR) reinforces eating
63
64Two-Factor TheoryUCS are Primary PunishersCS
are Conditioned Punishers
- Antecedents
- light (CS) elicits fear (HR increase)
- light (SD) elicits fleeing
- Consequences
- shock (UCS) elicits fear (HR increase)
- shock (SP) punishes staying
- escape from shock (SR) reinforces fleeing
64
65Operant Conditioning in ContextDiscriminative
Stimuli
- Skinners three-term contingency A-B-C
- Discriminative stimuli (A) are the specific
stimuli that signal that specific behaviors (B)
will be reinforced or punished (C)
66Operant Conditioning
- Negative reinforcement and positive reinforcement
are often indistinguishable - Positive punishment is usually followed by neg.
reinforcement of an opposite behavior - Negative punishment is usually followed by pos.
reinforcement of an opposite behavior - SD and consequences are often CS
67Change the Environment
- Stimulus control
- Contingency management
- How and where?
- in clients natural environment
- in therapy sessions
- dragging out new behavior in sessions
- contingency contracts (not natural)
- therapy vacation/termination
68Change the Environment
- What responses get reinforced? How?
- Internal or external reinforcement?
- depression
- substance abuse
- anxiety disorder
- anger
- What consequences should change?
- Alternative ways to get reinforcers?
69Change the Environment
- Contingency management in therapy
- adolescent contract
- LA sliding scale contract
- LA getting more exercise and regulating sleep
- make phone calls more available
- end non-productive phone calls
70First Contingency Contract
- 2 pts exercise lt 8 am (time stamp receipts)
- 1 pt exercise gt 8 am
- 1 pt work lt 8 am (3 pts max)
- points session fee
- 1 200
- 4 140
- 5 80
- 7 20
- 0 0
712nd Contingency Contract
- Cardio exercise machine (verified with photo)
- any level of intensity
- lt 8 am 4 per minute (fee reduction)
- gt 8 am 1 per minute
- minutes session fee EXAMPLES
- 0 200
- 30 (lt 8 am) 80
- 50 (lt 8 am) 0
- 50 (gt 8 am) 150
- 120 (gt 8 am) 80
72New Contingency Contract
- Target Behaviors
- work before 7am (verified with printout)
- babysitting nephews at their house before 7am
(verified via caller ID phone call) - exercise lt 8 am (verified by photo emailed by
830am) - Daily fees (for 7 mornings prior to session)
- 50 if no babysitting and no work before 8 am.
- 20 when begin babysitting or work 7 am - 8 am.
- 0 when begin babysitting or work before 7 am
- fee reduction of 60 per mile (lt 8 am) on cardio
exercise machine
73Contingency Management
- UAs 3 days/wk, 2 days/wk, 1 day/wk
- Voucher Method
- 1 each time abstinent, increase 1.50 each time
- reset to 1 if positive, refusal, or missed
- 2 weeks of negatives reinstates highest reward
- 10/wk bonus
- Lottery Prize Method (variable ratio schedule)
- 50 chance of money or Good job, try again
- usually 1 or 20, and 1/500 chance for 100
- each time abstinent one extra draw
73
74Contingency Management
- Cost per patient for six weeks outpatient
treatment - 175 - Standard
- 375 - Voucher Method (100 paid to patient)
- 350 - Lottery Prize Method (80 paid to patient)
- 12 weeks of intervention in research studies
74
75Escape ConditioningPunishment Neg.
Reinforcement
75
76Negative Reinforcement
- Escape Negative reinforcement
- escape from punishment and UCS/CS
- punishment for not escaping
- no opportunity for extinction when there is no
longer any UCS - Avoidance of punishment reinforcement
76
77Two-Factor Fear Theory
- The Avoidance Paradox
- How could an absence of a stimulus reinforce a
response? - Solution
- escape from fear CR is negative reinforcer
77
78Evidence for Two-Factor Theory
- Escape from CS decreases fear CR
- Increasing fear (CR) increases avoidance
- adding conditioned fear stimuli
- Decreasing fear decreases avoidance
- adding conditioned inhibitors (safety signals)
78
79Problems with Two-Factor Theory
- Not all fears begin with classical conditioning
- Fear extinction should occur after CS repeated
without UCS - extinction only to brief CS exposure if escape
- Fear decreases as avoidance (of UCS) becomes
stronger/quicker over time - avoidance without noticeable fear
- increasing sense of control and predictability
79
80Two-Factor Fear Theory
- The Avoidance Paradox
- How could an absence of a stimulus reinforce a
response? - Solutions
- CS are conditioned/secondary punishers
- escape from CS is negative reinforcer
- CS is an SD
- safety signals are conditioned positive
reinforcers
80
81One-Factor Theory
- Avoidance responses can be learned without
respondent conditioning (CS or CR) - Sidman non-signaled avoidance task
- no obvious CS to avoid
- pressing a bar delays a shock for 30 sec
- 10 vs. 30 probability of shock every 2 sec
81
82Agenda class 4
- Pratice midterm exam
- Your examples
- Reading quiz
- Review FA instructions and examples
- SuperNanny videos
- Your projects
- New videos
82
83Behavioral Conceptualization of Hypothetical
Constructs
- Non-behavioral explanations
- internalize and externalize
- need
- projection
- catharsis (emotional release)
- rejection sensitivity is the reason why some
people are exceptionally distressed by rejection
84Behavioral Conceptualization of Hypothetical
Constructs
- Report the times of day the behavior occurs
- Give specific examples of thoughts
- Focus on consequences that actually explain why
the behavior occurs. Do not list hypothetical
long-term consequences
85Behavioral Problem Definition
- 1. stressed
- 2. tardiness
- 3. procrastination
- 4. biting nails "is not that strong"
- 5. driving "well above" the speed limit
- 6. unexpectedly heavy traffic is cause of
arriving late (target should be time at leaving
the house) - Review the Target sections of previous
students functional analyses
86Behavioral Analyses
- Estimate the probabilities of the response (e.g.,
every time?) when the various "triggers" occur - Conditional probabilities
- P(AB) vs. P(BA)
86
87Therapeutic Exposure
- Learned emotional responses will be eliminated
when - there is repeated/prolonged exposure to all
triggers (and variations thereof) - in all contexts
- as long as the person does not escape
- and nothing bad happens.
- Is it feasible?
87
88Therapeutic Exposure
- (prolonged non-reinforced exposure and response
prevention) - Expose
- repeated avoided behaviors
- enter avoided situations
- present avoided stimuli
- actual stimuli (in vivo)
- imagery (simulation)
88
89Emotional Processing Theory
- Activate the emotion schema
- e.g., danger
- therefore, arousal should be high
- Introduce incompatible information
- e.g., safety (disconfirm danger)
- (active cognitive processing)
89
90Extinction
- Reversal (decrease) of learned responses
- reverse classical conditioning
- reverse operant responses
- Extinction is new learning not un-learning
- does not erase previous learning
- decrease in response depends on context
- original conditioning often overrides extinction
90
91Respondent Extinction
- Conditioned stimuli occur
- Emotionally-evocative stimuli no longer follow
- UCS
- 1st-order CS (to extinguish 2nd-order CS)
91
92Reinforced Fear
- Reacquisition re-pairing of CS and UCS
- Reinstatement recurrence of UCS reactivates the
CR, even if no additional pairing
92
93Reacquisition of Fear
- CS1 light
- CS1 gt shock (10 times, 100 amps)
- CS1 gt fear (9/10)
- CS1 gt no shock (100 times)
- CS1 gt no fear (2/10)
- CS1 gt shock (1 time , 50 amps)
- CS1 gt fear (8/10)
93
94Respondent Habituationvs. Extinction
- Habituation is a decrease in CR and UCR due to
simple repetition of CS and UCS - person gets used to the stimulus
- satiation is habituation to positive stimuli
- Extinction only explains reduction in CR
- lack of stimuli that could reinforce CR
94
95Habituation or Extinction?
- No longer bothered by Sushi after many Sushi
meals - Less excitement after many years in a
relationship - Child becomes less afraid of water by staying in
- Water seems less cold after staying in a while
- Repeatedly petting a dog reduces fear
- Praise becomes less effective if it is used too
much - Criticism becomes less effective if it is used
too much - Whipping becomes less effective punishment
95
96PTSD Fear Schema
96
97What do PTSD Patients Avoid?
- Conditioned stimuli (fear schema)
- classically conditioning
- higher order conditioning
- semantic conditioning
- Fear and other emotions
- Symbolic and verbal stimuli
- Mental images of catastrophes
97
98Extinction Depends on Context
- Extinguished responses return when the extinction
context differs from the new context
(conditioning is more general) - time
- previous events
- physical setting or other stimuli
- biological states
- emotional states
98
99Extinction Depends on Context
- Extinguished responses (respondent and operant)
return when the extinction context differs from
the new context - spontaneous recovery (AAA)
- renewal (ABA, ABC, AAB)
99
100Extinction Depends on Memory
- We never forgot our past harm
- We easily forget our past safety
- Memory enhancers
- D-cycloserine
- Extinction reminders
100
101Extinction Depends on Context
- Renewal Types
- 1 2 3
- Conditioning A A A
- Extinction B A B
- Re-exposure A B C
- to CS/SD
- There are three settings or contexts A, B, C
101
102Renewal Examples
- extinction context renewal context
- jumping barrier added barrier removed
- no drug lever removed drug lever added
- SuperNanny present SuperNanny gone
- male therapist in office at clients home
- greyhound did not bite bulldog
- Black friendly in suburb in ghetto
102
103Conditioned InhibitionSafety Signals
- J.P. Segundo
- cats were given painful electric current
- a sound (CS) occurred when electricity was turned
off (-UCS) - UCR relaxation
- CR sound elicited relaxation even when current
was not turned off
103
104Renewal of Avoidance Extinction
104
105ABA Renewal
- CS1 (light) gt UCS (shock) gt CS2 (sound)
- CS1 gt fear
- CS2 gt relaxation
- CS1 CS2 gt no shock (extinction)
- CS1 CS2 gt no fear
- CS1 gt fear
105
106Renewal (Internal Context)
- CS1 (light) gt UCS (shock)
- CS1 gt fear
- CS1 CS2 (caffeine) gt no shock
- CS1 CS2 gt no fear (extinction)
- CS1 gt fear
- CS1 gt no shock (extinction)
- CS1 CS2 (caffeine) gt fear
106
107ABA Renewal
- CS1 (outside) gt UCS (vomit)
- CS1 (outside) gt fear gt pills gt less fear
- pills gt relaxation
- CS1 pills gt extinction (no fear)
- CS1 gt fear
107
108Safety SignalsExplanations for Safety
- Safety is attributed to the safety signal, not
the CS - Therefore, the perceived danger of the CS is not
disconfirmed
108
109Reinstatement of Fear
- CS1 light, CS2 sound
- CS1 gt shock (10 times, 100 amps)
- CS1 gt fear (9/10)
- CS1 gt no shock (100 times)
- CS1 gt no fear (2/10)
- CS2 gt shock (1 time , 100 amps)
- CS1 gt fear (5/10)
109
110SuperNanny
- mutual coercion (negative reinforcement)
- stimulus control (structure)
- non-contingent reinforcers (estab. oper.)
- extinction (no pay off for bad behavior and not
getting out of demands) - negative reinforcement (time out)
- extinction (for getting off time out)
- extinction for leaving bed
110
111ABA Bird Feeding Renewal
- MOVE OPERANT RENEWAL SLIDES TO A MUCH EARLIER
LECTURE
111
112ABA Child Tantrum Renewal
- 1 Parents extend bed time (before SuperNanny)
- 2 With help from SuperNanny, parents do not
extend bedtime - 3 After SuperNanny leaves, parents ask for bed
time and child tantrums
112
113AAB Child Tantrum Renewal
- 1 Parents extend bed time
- 2 Parents do extinction
- 3 Babysitter ask for bed time and child tantrums
- 1 Parents extend bed time at home
- 2 Parents do extinction at home
- 3 Parents ask for bed time on vacation and child
tantrums
113
114Distraction and Safety Behaviors
- 1. Safety behaviors and distraction can impede
emotional processing - 2. Safety behaviors and distraction can enhance
emotional processing
115Advantages of Modern Integrative CBT Theory
- Is flexible for different cases
- Encourages examination of many causes
- More opportunities for intervention
- Considerable empirical support
- Guides effective interventions
115
116Stimulus Control
- Current stimuli can control current responses
- bell gt salivation
- white rat gt fear
- close gt contraction of pupils
- bedroom gt alertness anxietyworry
- being in any car gt sleepiness sleep
- size of plate gt amount of food eaten
- darkness (outside) gt TV (no chores)
116
117Problems with Reinforcement
- Therapists lack of awareness of mutual influence
or of behaviors needing to be reinforced - Inadvertent reinforcement of problems
- Inadvertent failure to reinforce progress
117
118Generalization Gradient
118
119Reinforcement Example
- cues (SDs)
- same physical position
- I repeat word/number when she reaches toward the
wrong one - she looks at my facial expression
- she looks at where I am looking
119
120Newer Theories ofRespondent Conditioning
- Conditioning does not simply result from repeated
temporal pairing of stimuli - high base-rate occurrence of UCS (without CS)
reduces strength of CR - high base-rate occurrence of CS (without UCS)
reduces strength of CR - depends on other stimuli and context
- some stimuli are harder to condition
- CS can be paired with absence of UCS
120
121Ways to Change Learned Emotional Responses
- Cognitive restructuring
- Therapeutic exposure to emotion triggers
- Counter-conditioning (reciprocal inhibition)
- problematic stimuli/responses paired with other
competing/opposite stimuli/responses - emotion regulation behaviors
- opposite actions (e.g., approach, confidence)
- Cognitive dissonance induction
122Orienting to Exposure
- Habituation
- Emotional processing
- role of safety signals
- Self-efficacy (confidence and control)
- Generalization (prevent renewal)
- Opposite action
122
123Exposure Rationale
- Brain tricks us into believing overly fearful
- protects us by overgeneralizing perceived danger
- reminders, memories, and images seen as dangerous
- emotion brain areas different than logical areas
- Desensitize or get used to triggers
- give examples
- Practice tolerating or coping with triggers
- Get brain to realize that many situations,
reminders, memories, images are not dangerous - needs convincing information from a new
experience - needs enough time for safety info to sink in to
the gut - we must talk to the emotional part of the brain
- We can act into new emotions
123
124Resistance to Exposure Therapy
- Client Questions
- Why should it help when I already get triggered
all the time? - Why should I repeat negative thoughts when I will
just end up believing them more and get more
upset?
125Systematic DesensitizationRelaxation does
improves outcomeswhen added to intermittent
imaginal exposure1 gt 2
126Systematic Desensitization
- Imaginal exposure can reduce fear without any
relaxation training - Relaxation sometimes does reduce fear more than
graded imagery alone - when therapist controls progress up the hierarchy
- when there are few treatment sessions
- when there is short duration of exposure trials
- Most studies have shown that the timing of
relaxation does not influence outcomes
127Systematic Desensitization
- In animal studies
- exposure to CS is necessary and sufficient for
fear reduction - graded exposure vs flooding has comparable
outcomes - offering food during exposure can help OR impede
fear reduction - helpful if the food helps the animal get more
exposure
128Exposure Relaxation
- For fear reduction
- prolonged exposure is most effective
- adding relaxation does not help
- 1 2 gt 3
129Exposure Relaxation
- It is possible that relaxation
- increases collaboration and willingness
- gets more exposure
- makes desensitization occur more quickly
130Exposure Cog.Restructuring
- For fear reduction
- adding cognitive restructuring does not help
- 1 2 gt 3
131What is the most effective way to change a
negative schema?
- How to solve the head vs. gut problem?
- Is cognitive processing necessary?
- rational disputation or experiential/emotional?
- Are passive learning experiences sufficient if
the person gets important new info? - Is active coping necessary?
- Are new actions necessary?
131
132Unified Protocolfor Treating Emotion Disorders
- Psychoeducation (attitude toward emotion)
- Antecedent cognitive reappraisal
- cognitive restructuring during episodes can be
form of avoidance - encourage cognitive flexibility
- get clients into avoided situations
- Prevention of emotional avoidance
- increase emotion awareness and tolerance
- Changing emotion-driven behaviors
133Opposite Action for Unjustified Emotions
134Opposite Action
- Not avoiding
- prolonged exposure and response prevention
- Actively approach (and choose)
- behavioral activation mastery experiences
- Opposite associations (counter-conditioning)
- Opposite emotions (reciprocal inhibition)
- Opposite verbal behavior
- Opposite nonverbal behavior
- confidence
- voice
- face
135New Behavior Changes Cognition
- On the one hand, explanations of change
processes are becoming more cognitive. - On the other hand, it is performance-based
treatments that are proving most powerful in
effecting psychological changes. Regardless of
the method involved, the treatments implemented
through actual performance achieve results
consistently superior to those in which fears are
eliminated to cognitive representations of threat
(Bandura, 1977, p. 78)
135
136Modern CBT Theory
136
137Modern Behavioral Theory
137
138New thinking prompts new behaviors that lead to
more reinforcers and fewer punishers, which
changes depressive affect
138
139New behaviors lead to more reinforcers and fewer
punishers, which changes belief, which changes
depressive affect
139
140Counter-Conditioning
- Activate the conditioned responses
- Present stimuli that elicit different responses
- candy gt pleasure
- Engage in behaviors that elicit opposite
responses (reciprocal inhibition) - relaxation is incompatible with fear
- approach is opposite to fear, shame
140
141Counterconditioning
- CS UCS UCR CR .
- T1 rat gt orienting
- T2 noise gt startle/fear
- T3 rat noise gt startle/fear
- T4 rat gt fear/crying
- CS UCS UCR CR .
- T4 rat candy gt fear reduction
- T4 rat gt pleasure
141
142Reciprocal Inhibition TheoryFear Reduction
- Activate the conditioned fear responses
- Elicit incompatible responses to fear
- relaxation
- humor
- curiousity
- sexual pleasure
- HRV
- anger?
- (choose to) approach (with confidence)
142
143Systematic DesensitizationRelaxation does
improves outcomeswhen added to intermittent
imaginal exposure1 gt 2
144Reciprocal Inhibition TheoryAnger Reduction
- Activate the conditioned anger responses
- Elicit incompatible responses to anger
- empathy
- kindness
144
145Opposite Action
146Opposite Action
- Examples
- slow breathing
- nodding (head phone study)
- smiling (facial feedback)
- eat fried grasshoppers
- opposite political speech
- self-esteem
- snake exposure therapy commitment
- obesity study gains maintained 2 years
146
147Cognitive DissonanceCognitive Theory
- When we do act contrary to our beliefs and there
are insufficient reasons for doing so we are
uncomfortable (for lying, time, effort) - To reduce the discomfort we change our beliefs so
that we convince ourselves that there really was
no discrepancy - Ex self-attribution (personal explanation)
- I did it because I wanted to (intrinsic
interest) - I said it because its true
147
148Cognitive Dissonance Induction
- Counter-attitudinal role-playing
- elicit opposite public behaviors
- speech
- nonverbal behavior
- attitude act as if
- elicit discomfort and maximize effort
- low pressure high choice
- encourage internal attributions
148
149Cognitive Dissonance Induction
- Reduce avoidance
- increase emotional processing
- increase mastery and confidence
- solve problems and increase reinforcers
- Facial feedback
- Cognitive dissonance
- operant conditioning of consistency
- Classical conditioning
- smile (nodding) is CS for liking/agreement
149
150Cognitive DissonanceBehavioral Theory
- We reinforce each other for consistency
- we want others to be predictable
- We get punished for
- lying or breaking promises
- hypocrisy
- flip-flopping (John Kerry)
- Only if observed by others and if no observable
external control or valid reasons
150
151Albert Bandura
- Observational learning (modeling)
- Attention
- Retention
- Reproduction
- Motivation
- past consequences
- promised consequences
- vicarious consequences
151
152Albert Bandura
- Self-regulation (self-control)
- Self-observation
- Standards of performance
- Self-administered consequences
152
153Cognitive-Affective Personality System
- Encoding-interpretation
- Expectancies
- Values and Goals
- Self-regulation
- Competencies and Skills
153
154The Functions of CBT
- 1. Increase abilities for effective behavior to
live a valued life - 2. Improve motivation and salience of true goals
- 3. Decrease thoughts/emotions that interfere with
effective behaviors or quality of life - 4. Increase distress tolerance and acceptance
- 5. Restructure the environment to promote
effective behaviors (antecedents and
consequences) - 6. Ensure generalization to natural environment
154
155Skills
- 1. Behavioral control
- self-talk
- self-management (e.g., stimulus control)
- 2. Emotion regulation
- 3. Distress tolerance
- 4. Interpersonal effectiveness
155
156Obstacles to New Learning and Emotion Extinction
- Failure to change the emotion schema
- failure to access schema
- new beliefs in the head but not the gut
- safety signals
- safety behaviors
- Other problems with generalization
- new learning occurred in limited internal or
external contexts
156
157Maximizing New Learning and Emotion Extinction
- Change the emotion schema
- access schema by eliciting emotion
- prevent safety signals
- block safety behaviors (avoidance)
- Promote generalization
- new learning in all relevant contexts
157
158Generalizing New LearningState-Dependent
Learning
- Goal to increase a new effective behavior or
coping response. - People will be more able/likely to engage in new
behaviors and coping responses in new contexts
are similar to the contexts in which the
responses were learned.
158
159Processing Modes
- Intellectual Emotional
- Verbal Nonverbal
- Explicit Implicit / Tacit
- Conscious Unconscious
- Semantic Procedural
- Propositional Implicational
159
160Generalizing New Learning and Emotion Extinction
- Practice in all relevant contexts
- bring therapy into real life
- (cued) homework practice
- extinction reminder (safety signal?)
- in vivo coaching via telephone
- bring real life into therapy
- activate relevant emotions (schemas)
- have a genuine relationship
- work on real problems that emerge in sessions
160
161Generalizing New Learning and Emotion Extinction
- First
- approach evocative stimulus (in vivo)
- elicit fear, sadness, shame, depression, anger
- hold, smell, and taste alcohol
- hear negative statements
- imagine (or talk about) upsetting scenarios
- describe traumatic event in detail
- Then practice
- adaptive thinking
- regulating emotions (e.g., relax)
- acting assertive
- inhibiting impulsive action or acting opposite
161
162Generalizing New Learning and Emotion Extinction
- Rehearse thoughts during relevant emotion
- Devils advocate
- therapist voices negative thinking
- Systematic Rational Restructuring
- patient imagines upsetting situation
- Stress Inoculation Therapy
162
163- There once was a man who hated his own
footprints. In order to get away from the
footprints, the man ran faster and faster. But
the faster he ran, the more footprints he made.
And finally, he ran himself to death. - - Zhuangzi, 300 BC
163
164Three Ways to Reduce Suffering and Stop Problem
Behaviors
- 1. Change problematic thoughts
- 2. Reduce negative emotions
- 3. Change the way you relate to your thoughts and
emotions (internal context)
1653rd Wave of CBT
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy
- Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy
- Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction
- Mindfulness-based Relapse Prevention
- Mindfulness-based Therapy for GAD
166Modern Behavioral Theory
166
167Mindfulness
- Keeping ones consciousness alive to the present
reality Hanh - Bringing ones complete attention to the present
experience on a moment-to-moment basis Marlatt - Paying attention in a particular wayon purpose,
in the present moment, and nonjudgmentally
Kabat-Zinn
168Meditation is OnlyOne Form of Mindfulness
- Forms of mindfulness practice
- Internal vs. external focus
- Focused vs. open awareness
- Isolated/sitting vs. integrated into life
169Mindfulness is NOT
- Buddhism
- Meditation
- Relaxation
- Thinking about what you notice
- Stopping thoughts
170Acceptance
- Experiencing events fully and without defense
Hayes
171Acceptance
- Non-acceptance Pain Suffering
- Acceptance is NOT approval
- Acceptance is too hard!
- imagine accepting
- act as if you accept
- fully accept for even a moment
- Accept what is not true?
172Why Mindfulness?
- Differentiate facts vs. thoughts and judgments
- notice judgments and interpretations
- describe facts rather than judge or interpret
- Get unstuck from thoughts/memories
- pain with less suffering
- reduce rumination
- effective action despite contrary thoughts,
feelings, or urges (slow down!) - Exposure to primary emotions
- Effective distraction
173What is Your Brain Thinking?
- The thought ____ just popped into my mind
- I just felt like saying
- Dont take it personal!
- I just noticed ____ feeling arise within me
- Therapists should model this distancing
174Mindfulness-Based CT
- Kabat-Zinn MBSR applied to depression
- Works for depression relapse
- Works for depression in which thinking plays a
prominent role - Does not work for reactive depression
175Mindfulness-Based CT
- Study 1
- epis. MBCT TAU
- 1-2 54 31
- gt2 37 66
- Study 2
- MBCT TAU
- 1-2 50 20
- gt2 36 78
176Acceptance andCommitment Therapy
- Get out of your head and into your life
177Acceptance via Metaphors
- Quicksand
- Chinese finger traps
- The unruly child
178Question
- What is the relevance of ironic process theory
for understanding and treating disorders of
emotion?
178
179Ironic Process Theory
- Operating process
- Intentionally create distracting mental content
- Is difficult because negative content is much
more accessible than positive - very effortful, requires a lot of cognitive
resources - Monitoring process
- automatic search for failure
179
180Harmful Effects of Rewards
- When the reward is
- tangible / arbitrary / excessive
- promised in advance or expected
- contingent upon task involvement or effort
- When the behavior is
- already occurring at a high rate
- Handout 14
180
181Effective Reinforcement
- Contingent on completion of a behavior
- Provides specific useful feedback
- Not coercive, judgmental, or tied to punishment
- Minimal reinforcement
- Intermittent reinforcement
- Natural reinforcement
- pay attention to what the client does
- be responsive (reinforce behavior that is useful)
- use your natural reactions (SISD)
- generalizable (available in many contexts)
182Natural Reinforcement
- Putting on a jacket keeps you warm
- Using a toilet keeps you clean and dry
- Complying with a request (not praise)
- Excitement (not praise)
- Dismay or demoralization
- Flow of a conversation/relationship
- Bored listener when a client rambles
- SISD positive or negative
182
183Natural Reinforcement
- Amber
- Reading games
- Reading lyrics
- Reading gets compliance from us
- Opponent process shivered awake right after
dreaming about hot shower
183
184Behavior Self-Interpretation
- We make conclusions about ourselves based on our
behaviors and relevant explanations for our
behaviors given the environmental context - Behavior-schema discrepancy is uncomfortable
(dissonant) without external explanations - We seek to reduce dissonance either by finding
reasonable external explanations or by changing
our view of ourselves.
184
185The Cognitive Revolution
- Aaron T. Beck
- Albert Ellis
- Julian Rotter
- locus of control
- Albert Bandura
- Social Learning Theory
- Social-Cognitive Theory
- Walter Mischel (Cervone Shoda)
- Cognitive and Affective Personality System
186Levels of Cognition
- Schemas (e.g., inferred or latent content)
- core beliefs
- cognitive-affective neural networks
- Cognitive processing
- schema activation (inferred)
- distortions (e.g., negative bias)
- attributional style
- Cognitive products (content in awareness)
- automatic thoughts
- attributional conclusions
186
187Schemas
- Many inter-related components
- stimulus elements
- meaning elements
- (core) beliefs
- emotion elements
- action tendencies (scripts)
188Fear Schema
188
189Activation of Schemas
- Ambiguous situations similar to aspects of
schema - similar stimuli (visual, touch, smell, etc.)
- similar behaviors of others (comments, visual
appearance) - similar emotions
- similar meaning
190Count the Fs
- FINISHED FILES ARE THE RE-
- SULT OF YEARS OF SCIENTIF-
- IC STUDY COMBINED WITH
- THE EXPERIENCE OF YEARS.
191Cognitive Distortions
- Overgeneralization
- Labeling
- All-or-nothing thinking (rigidity)
- Mental filter
- Ignoring/discounting the positives
- Jumping to conclusions
- Mind Reading
- Fortune Telling
- Exaggeration/Minimization
- Emotional reasoning
- "Should" statements (rigid rules)
- Personalizing/Blame
191
192Depressive Thinking
- Becks Cognitive Triad
- Distorted negative thinking about
- Self (low self-esteem)
- World
- nothing is meaningful or worthwhile
- Future
- hopelessness
- helplessness (low self-efficacy)
192
193Schema Activation
- Schema I am unlovable
- Situation boss gives corrective feedback
- Cog. processing Cog. Products
- jumping to conclusions He is criticizing me
- neg. attribution / label (because) I am a
loser - mind-reading (because) he hates me
- fortune telling I will get fired
193
194Schema Activation
- Schema I am unlovable
- Situation Partner ends romantic relationship to
move away for graduate school. Relationship was
very strong, but not long - Cog. processing Cog. Products
- neg. attribution (because) I am fat / ugly
- judgmental label / filter I am fat / ugly
- should I should lose more weight
- fortune telling I will never find another
194
195Schemas
- Danger Schemas Phobias
- Interpersonal Schemas
- Racial prejudice
- Gender roles
- Self-Schemas
- Unlovability/Rejection
- Abandonment/Mistrust
- Defectiveness/Shame
- Helplessness/Dependence
- Subjugation/Self-sacrifice
196Schemas
- CBT primarily works by changing schemas
- (Outdated?) remnants of previous learning
- Elaborate well-organized cognitive-affective
structures, or neural networks - Function
- Make sense of situations with incomplete or
ambiguous information - Generate useful responses to situations
197Schema Activation
- Schema Black people are criminals
- Situation see person taking food from a store
without paying - Verbal response ??
- Schema Black people are dangerous
- Situation police officer sees person standing
up from behind an object in an alley - Motor response ??
198Schema Activation
- Schema Old people are slow and sickly
- Priming see old words
- Motor response slower walking down hall
- Schema Interrupting is rude, helping is nice
- Situation describing a nice friend
- Motor response offer help to someone else
199Three CBT Approaches to Treating Depression
- Cognitive restructuring (inside out approach)
- change the content of thoughts
- Behavioral activation (outside in approach)
- activity scheduling
- problem solving
- change the function/context of thinking
- function of avoidance
- context of literality (ACT defusion, mindfulness)
- make behavior depend less on thinking/mood
199
200Activity Scheduling in Cognitive Therapy
- Pleasurable activities
- Nothing is meaningful or worthwhile
- Mastery activities (self-efficacy)
- I am incapable of doing anything
- Behavioral experiments
- I am incapable of that
- It wont work out
200
201Evidence for Cognitive Theories
- Many correlational clinical studies
- Some analog experimental studies
- repeating negative statements (Velten)
- delay of gratification (cognitive
transformations) - self-efficacy manipulations
- Clinical experiments on misattribution
- insomnia
- social fears
- Cognitive therapy is effective
201
202Cognitive Therapy Mediation Studies
- 1) CT is based on cognitive theory
- thinking causes emotions and behavior
- 2) Change in CT is associated with cog