YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Individual Application of Cognitive Communication Theory
Essays 1201 - 1230
In seven pages this report examines group therapy as addiction treatment in a consideration of how cognitive therapy can assist in...
many different problems, including attention-deficit disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anxiety, depression and a number of ...
an assessment done on a younger and presumably more healthy person. For example, an older persons greater likelihood toward cardia...
attitudes, and to use awareness and time to reconsider personal actions. The most positive end result is the adoption of better t...
occur on an everyday basis. Some errors are minor but others can have disastrous consequences. Some can even lead to increased l...
into a state of psychological dissonance, which, in turn, produces an unpleasant tension (Rudolph, 2003). According to Festinger, ...
review, the authors of the study indicate that they came to the conclusions that comprehensive psychophysiological theories need t...
Bouton, Mineka and Barlow (2001, 4) comment: "Anxiety, an anticipatory emotional state that functions to...
approximately $2.2 billion of their own money in 1968; that amount increased to $4.2 billion in 1984, which quadrupled to $17.1 bi...
(Schrag, 1995; Hunt, Soto, Maier & Doering, 2003). Nelson (2002) takes this one step further by pointing to a body of resea...
necessary to explore the intricacies of transference, which is an integral part of the classic Freudian approach (Cutler, et al, 2...
the twenty-first century, the question is not does man continue upon this ever-broadening road of tremendous technological discove...
(Bromwell, n.d.). This approach would also try to have the patient develop different patterns of thinking (Bromwell, n.d.). For ex...
cognitive development theory; cognitive restructuring; and Bruners introduction of the cognitive revolution. Sperrys connection b...
outside of marriage. Chastity is the watchword of Christian ethics pertaining to sexual relations. Its teachings reflect t...
was not at all happy with her appearance. All her life up until just a few years ago she had been able to eat whatever she wanted...
2008). He saw both his mother and his fianc?e as weak and lacking their own lives (Mendelowitz, 2008). The use of this case study ...
think logically about abstract situations (Child Development Institute, 2008; Woolfolk, 2006). Piaget said that learning happens ...
In ten pages cognitive neuropsychology is considered in this data assessment pertaining to acquired dyslexia and evaluates the sig...
In fifteen pages this paper discusses child cognitive development in a consideration of how it is affected by malnutrition with im...
one is interrupted in the middle of it. Wallace and Chen (2005) report that cognitive failure has often been related to issues lik...
do to earn a living and even what to buy with their own money (Borgen and Amundson, 1998). During this phase, adolescents also lea...
29 percent of the entire group of patients at the beginning of the study (Weeks, 2004; NIMH, 2005). This rate was reduced in all f...
that although psychologists differentiate between thinking and problem solving, both are critical in learning. Engaging in proble...
percentage of parents who lack the appropriate knowledge of how to raise an infant, often - if not unwittingly - ignoring the infa...
2006). Marcotte and colleagues (2002) note that a great deal of progress has been made in this field over the last two decades but...
makes clear, efforts are needed in order to explore the reasons why African American adolescents often do not seek prenatal care a...
health services available to students. Changes over the years have diminished that role to the point of eliminating it in many sc...
reported that behavior therapy follows "a format of therapist modeling, behavior rehearsal, specific therapy assignments, self-rec...
frequently use mental health nurses as a means for expanding services (Winefield and Chur-Hansen, 2004). The following examination...