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The Biology and Psychology of Taste
Linda M. Bartoshuk and Derek J. Snyder
in Food and Addiction: A Comprehensive Handbook
Chapter 18 explores biology and the psychology of taste. It discusses oral sensations, the four basic tests and affect, umami and fat, taste and olfactory qualities, taste pathology, the ...
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Beyond Coping: Meeting Goals, Visions, and Challenges
Erica Frydenberg (ed.)
There are many challenges to be faced in contemporary society including the stresses of everyday living in the technological age and changes in patterns of employment and family life. ...
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Schema Therapy
Richard Vuijk, Hannie van Genderen, Hilde M. Geurts, and Arnoud Arntz
in Psychological Therapies for Adults with Autism
This chapter outlines schema therapy (ST) as a treatment possibility for adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and comorbid personality disorder (PD). The chapter begins with some key ...
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Prognosis (Patient Outcomes)
W. Curt LaFrance Jr. and Jeffrey Peter Wincze
in Treating Nonepileptic Seizures: Therapist Guide
Although there is no way to predict outcome with any patient population, several patient characteristics appear to predict better results and prognosis. Drawing from clinical trial data and ...
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Mirror-Role of Mother and Family in Child Development
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 8, 1967 - 1968
In this paper, Winnicott takes the subject of the mother’s face for the baby as the precursor of the mirror in the child’s emotional development. He explores the normal and pathological ...
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Hospital Care Supplementing Intensive Psychotherapy in Adolescence
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 6, 1960-1963
In this talk to the McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts, on the opening of new facilities for the care of psychiatrically ill adolescents, Winnicott describes some characteristics of ...
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The Theory of the Parent-Infant Relationship
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 6, 1960-1963
In this paper on the subject of the parent-infant relationship given at an IPA congress, Winnicott looks at actual infancy, as against the psychoanalytic study of primitive mental ...
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Participant Factors in Treating Anxiety Disorders
Michelle G. Newman, Paul Crits-Christoph, Mary Beth Connolly Gibbons, and Thane M. Erickson (eds)
in Principles of Therapeutic Change That Work
Chapter 6 discusses participant factors in treating anxiety disorders. It examines functional impairment (i.e., severity/distress, duration of symptoms, social support, interpersonal ...
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Theoretical background and issues
Gordon Claridge
in Schizotypy: Implications for Illness and Health
This chapter presents a theoretical background to the title itself. It explores varieties of psychosis, the borderlands of psychosis, and dimensions of psychosis. It discusses whether ...
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Maintenance Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT-M)
Mark D Miller, Ellen Frank, and Jessica C Levenson
in Casebook of Interpersonal Psychotherapy
Chapter 19 covers maintenance interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT-M), and that while effective psychotherapeutic and pharmacotherapeutic acute treatments for depression are well known, the ...
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Participant Factors in Treating Personality Disorders
Héctor Fernández-Alvarez, John F. Clarkin, María Del Carmen Salgueiro, and Kenneth L. Critchfield (eds)
in Principles of Therapeutic Change That Work
This chapter focuses on patient and therapist characteristics as they influence treatment outcomes for individuals diagnosed with one or more personality disorders (PDs). It includes ...
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Beliefs and obstacles to recovery in low back pain
A. Kim Burton, Gordon Waddell, and Chris J. Main
in The Power of Belief: Psychosocial influence on illness, disability and medicine
This chapter comprehensively address beliefs about back pain and provide a detailed review of recent initiatives designed specifically to target beliefs. A variety of disease processes, or ...
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Theoretical Foundation for the Body Project
Eric Stice, Paul Rohde, and Heather Shaw
in The Body Project: A Dissonance-Based Eating Disorder Prevention Intervention (2 ed.)
The Body Project is grounded in both the Dual Pathway model of eating pathology and Cognitive Dissonance theory. The Dual Pathway model posits that women's internalization of the thin-ideal ...
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The Body Project: A Dissonance-Based Eating Disorder Prevention Intervention (2 ed.)
Eric Stice, Paul Rohde, and Heather Shaw
The Body Project is an empirically based eating disorder prevention program that offers young women an opportunity to critically consider the costs of pursuing the ultra-thin ideal promoted ...
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