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Integrating approaches to complex cases using Interacting Cognitive Subsystems.

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Title: INTERACTING COGNITIVE SUBSYSTEMS Author: Mrs Isabel Clarke Last modified by: Chris Clarke Created Date: 2/14/2001 4:08:22 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Integrating approaches to complex cases using Interacting Cognitive Subsystems.


1
Integrating approaches to complex cases using
Interacting Cognitive Subsystems.
  • Isabel Clarke
  • Consultant Clinical Psychologist

2
Third Wave term coined by Hayes (Acceptance
Commitment Therapy)
  • Kabat-Zinn. Applied mindfulness to stress and
    pain.
  • Segal, Teasdale Williams. Mindfulness Based
    Cognitive Therapy (relapse in depression.)
  • Linehan. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (BPD)
  • Chadwick. Mindfulness groups for voices.
  • Hayes

3
Third Wave Cognitive Therapies
  • Developments in CBT as it tackles personality
    disorder, psychosis etc.
  • Therapeutic relationship important
  • Past history is significant
  • Change lies not so much in altering thought to
    alter feeling, but in altering the persons
    relationship to both thought and feeling
  • Mindfulness is a key component.

4
AIMS
  • Consider current trends in CBT and the challenge
    of finding theoretical coherence, linked to
    cognitive science.
  • Introduce the cross diagnostic, third wave
    approach we use at Woodhaven opportunity to try
    this out.
  • Theoretical background for this approach in ICS
    introduce the model.
  • Relate it to Attachment Theory, Evolutionary
    theories etc.
  • Use this to clarify
  • levels of processing
  • motivation issues
  • the formation and maintenance of schemas
  • triggering of early trauma memories
  • the role of relationship
  • More clinical applications based on this approach

5
Applying CBT to Severe Mental Health Problems.
  • Therapy is about healing the relationship between
    an individual and themselves.
  • Relationship is governed by emotion
  • CBT works on emotion by seeking to alter thought,
    behaviour or state of arousal
  • Where problems are rooted in early trauma etc.
    patterns are set up that are resistent to
    revision
  • The cool reflection needed is hard to achieve

6
  • LEVELS OF PROCESSING A THEORETICAL JUNGLE!
  • This problem leads to the recognition of
    different types or levels of processing within
    CBT e.g.s of theories of this.
  • Ellis Inference and Evaluation
  • Hot and Cold cognition
  • Power Dalgleish. SPAARS (theory of emotion).
  • Mark Williams overgeneral autobiographical
    memory.
  • Wells Mathews. S-REF and Metacognition
  • Metacognition.
  • Wells Mathews. S-REF
  • . 'Vulnerability to psychological dysfunction is
    associated with a cognitive-attentional syndrome
    characterised by heightened self-focussed
    attention, attentional bias,ruminative processing
    and activation of dysfunctional beliefs.
    ...mediated by executive processes that are
    directed by the patient's beliefs'.
  • Brewins VAMS and SAMS (just memory).
  • Ehlers Clark (following Roediger) conceptual
    v.data driven processing.

7
Features the theories have in common.
  • There is one direct, sensory driven, type of
    processing and a more elaborate and conceptual
    one.
  • The same distinction can be found in the memory.
  • Direct processing is emotional and characteristed
    by high arousal.
  • This is the one that causes problems e.g.
    flashbacks in PTSD.

8
Features of Emotion Driven Processing
  • Emotion regulates relationship both with
    yourself and others
  • It mobilises the body for action
  • That physical mobilisation gives the emotion its
    punch
  • Where physical arousal is prolonged it is
    unpleasant motivates people to avoid emotion
  • Emotion driven processing does not do time
    past threat is added to current threat (cf.
    Brewins PTSD research)
  • Role of past trauma in psychosis and PD is now
    being properly recognised.

9
Ideas to think about
  • Symptoms are just different ways of escaping from
    or avoiding unpleasant emotions what examples
    can you find?
  • In the light of this way of looking at things,
    what should be the main goals of therapy?
  • To meet those goals, where does CBT need to
    direct its efforts?
  • What therapeutic methods are likely to be useful?
  • What becomes less important?

10
Woodhaven Brief CBT Model
  • Simple formulation based on the levels of
    processing split between the emotional and
    logical thinking.
  • A Third Wave Cognitive therapy focus on
    intervening between thought and feeling rather
    than altering thought to effect feeling (see
    Hayes et al. 1999)
  • Management of arousal (breathing control), and
    mindfulness training to facilitate intervention
    in the cognitive/emotional process.
  • Nurses, community keyworkers and others can
    support people to do this.

11
Key features cont.
  • Techniques of meeting, expressing and letting go
    of emotion as opposed to the previous avoidance.
  • This draws on Linehan's (1993) approach and has
    similarities to Emotion Focused Therapy
    (Greenberg 2002).
  • Practical discussion of lifestyle management to
    ensure the continuation of a better adjustment.
  • All these features are designed to enable someone
    to take control of their own recovery in
    sympathy with the Recovery Approach (e.g. Repper
    Perkins, 2003).

12
Figure 1. Typical Formulation
NIGHTMARES CANT SLEEP
PAST ABUSE LOSSES
MORE DIFFICULT TO COPE
PARTNER LEAVING
FEAR RAGE SADNESS
AVOID GOING OUTSEEING PEOPLE
CUT SELF ATTEMPT SUICIDE
FRIENDS FAMILY ALARMED. COULD LOSE CUSTODY OF
CHILDREN
MORE TIME TO BROOD
FEEL WORSE
WAYS FORWARD DONT LET THE FEELINGS BE IN CONTROL
x IN CHARGE! DO THINGS DESPITE THE
FEELING BREATHING AND MINDFULNESS TO GET BACK
INTO THE PRESENT USE THE ENERGY OF THE ANGER
POSITIVELY.
13
Providing a cognitive science based theoretical
context.
  • Interacting Cognitive Subsystems
  • Evolutionary approaches - Gilbert etc.
  • Attachment theory - Bowlby etc.
  • Cognitive Analytic Therapy.
  • Current approaches to CBT for personality
    disorders
  • Schema focussed approaches
  • Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (Linehan)
  • ACT.

14
Features of Interacting Cognitive Subsystems
  • There are 9 subsystems, each with its own type of
    coding.
  • Some deal with sensory perception - auditory and
    visual
  • Some deal with language processing
  • There are two higher order systems the
    propositional and the implicational.

15
Interacting Cognitive Subsystems.
Body State subsystem

Implicational subsystem
Auditory ss.
Implicational Memory
Visual ss.
Verbal ss.
Propositional subsystem
Propositional Memory
16
The Propositional Subsystem
  • Verbal coding.
  • Manages logical thought - cool cognition
  • Verbally coded memory store integral to the
    subsystem.
  • Communicates directly only with the other
    language subsystems.
  • Intercommunication between it and the
    implicational subsystem Central Engine of
    Cognition.

17
Implicational Subsystem
  • Coded in all modalities - memory and current
    processing
  • Concerned with meaning and significance
  • Information about threat and value
  • Particularly concerned with the status of the
    self.
  • Directly connected to sensory and body subsystems

18
A challenging model of the mind.
  • The mind is simultaneously individual, and
    reaches beyond the individual, when the
    implicational ss. is dominant.
  • This happens at high and at low arousal.
  • There is a constant balancing act between logic
    and emotion human fallibility
  • Mindfulness is a useful technique to manage that
    balance.

19
Interacting Cognitive Subsystems.
Body State subsystem

Implicational subsystem
Auditory ss.
Implicational Memory
Visual ss.
Verbal ss.
Propositional subsystem
Propositional Memory
20
Important Features of this model
  • Our subjective experience is the result of two
    higher order processing systems interacting
    neither is in overall control.
  • Each has a different character, corresponding to
    hot and cool cognition.
  • The IMPLICATIONAL Subsystem manages emotion and
    therefore relationship.
  • The verbal, logical, PROPOSITIONAL ss. gives us
    our sense of individual self.

21
Other views of this balancing act of the
mind/self
  • Hayes split between experience and mind (for
    him mind language)
  • Damasio and the neuro perspective 3 types of
    self
  • proto self (body state maintenance)
  • core self (concerned with the experience of here
    and now linked to emotions)
  • Autobiographical self extended consciousness
    identity

22
DIALECTICAL BEHAVIOUR THERAPY Linehans STATES
OF MIND
  • EMOTION
  • MIND

REASONABLE MIND
WISE MIND
IN THE PRESENT IN CONTROL
23
ICS AND THE SELF.Imp. Subsystem and Arousal
  • Body ss. Information means Imp. Ss. is directly
    influenced by state of arousal.
  • Information about threat and value influences
    arousal (feedback loop).
  • High arousal interferes with flow of info.
    Between imp. and prop. Ss.
  • New prop. Information not integrated leading to
    redundant loops, or schemas.

24
ICS AND THE SELF Results of the arousal - imp.
Ss connection.
  • Similar levels of arousal / threat trigger
    memories from imp. Memory
  • These experiences are vividly re-experienced.
  • This is unpleasant - the triggering is avoided
  • This blocks areas of experience to full
    appraisal.
  • Threatening experiences are incompletely
    processed

25
ICS AND THE SELF The Role of Feelings
  • We experience all this as feelings.
  • Where there are problems - feelings become either
    blocked off, or overwhelming.
  • To function well, we need to be able to express
    and experience our feelings.
  • We also need to be able to think about them.

26
THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE SELF
  • The Implication ss. is constantly watching for
    information about threat to or value of the self.
  • Information about unacceptability leads to a
    disagreeable level of arousal.
  • This triggers any matching memories about
    unacceptibility in the imp. ss.
  • Where this happens, there is strong motivation to
    prevent access to this information.

27
Relationship, trauma and the construction of the
self a way into understanding Personality
Disorder.
  • A sense of self is gained through relationship.
  • The reaction of others gives us information about
    threat, safety and value.
  • Identity formation is dynamic comprises
  • sense of self as subject - imp.ss
  • sense of self as object - prop. Ss.
  • Major threat disrupts the sense of self hence
    personality disorder.

28
Self and Relationship.Imp. Ss Prop.ss
Info. About self.
Self (as subject
Self (as object
Self (as subject
other
Trauma Transitions
Early provisional self develops
Experience stored in imp.memory activated
Early self re- experienced
Sense of self as object disrupted early info.
Needs re-integration
29
Threat/Value Information
  • Threat to physical survival
  • Threat to our place in the social world
  • For the baby - the two threats are the same
  • For the child bullying and position with peers
    are common social threats
  • Sexual abuse gives a deeply threatening and
    confusing message about the self.
  • A sense of value and specialness is, I suggest,
    universally present.

30
WAYS OF COPING WITH FEELINGS WHERE THREAT TO SELF
IS TOO GREAT
  • Giving in - signalling submission (depression)
  • constant anxiety, worry and hypervigilance
  • anger - attribute elsewhere.
  • displacing anxiety - OCD, eating disorder
  • drink, drugs, etc.
  • dissociation - flipping between different
    experiences of the self

31
Therapeutic Methods suggested by this approach
  • 1. Control of Arousal.
  • Breathing techniques
  • Mindfulness
  • DBT techniques to extend tolerance of aversive
    emotion.
  • Body state awareness and monitoring.

32
2.Addressing Imp. level wounds
  • Uncovering these by interrogating the emotion
    (exploratory techniques).
  • Bring this material into propositional space -
    make sense of it by formulation.
  • Basis for new meaning.
  • Making connections between past and present while
    working at staying in the present.

33
3. Mobilising and nurturing the strong sense of
self.
  • Anger leads into innate sense of entitlement,
    despite abuse etc.
  • Mourn what has been lost and damaged
  • Celebrate what is strong. Often the deviant,
    rebel part that was suppressed to create the
    acceptable self.
  • Naming and integrating scattered elements of
    identity.
  • Mobilising and nurturing strengths
  • Building a comfortable sense of self

34
Some useful phrases
  • If it feels uncertain - you are on the right
    lines.
  • Your feelings give you important information
    about yourself.
  • You can take a feeling seriously and express it
    without acting upon it - acting upon it stops you
    thinking about it.

35
Applying this approach to one of your clients.
  • List the aspects of the case that are explained
    by the model
  • Does the model provide any normalising and non
    blaming explanations? Come up with some phrases.
  • Try a formulation of the case using the spikey
    diagram
  • What interventions are then suggested?
  • Who would support these? Do they all need
    therapist support, or is there scope for
    delegating?

36
Implicational thinking is all or nothing. Use the
diagram to organise what is presented and
encourage realistic engagement in the middle.

Ideal Middle Way Horrible
Never matches reality flips into horrible Feels uncertain Leads to withdrawal
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