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Smith, Jacqui; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Examined whether clinical psychology practice facilitated access to and acquisition of wisdom, defined as expert knowledge in fundamental pragmatics of life. Compared responses to wisdom-related dilemmas from young and older clinicians with responses from other professionals. Young and older adults did not differ on factual knowledge, procedural…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Clinical Psychology, Foreign Countries, Knowledge Level
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Kuther, Tara L. – Teaching of Psychology, 2003
Tara L. Kuther, the author of this article, is an associate professor of psychology at Western Connecticut State University, where she teaches courses in child, adolescent, and adult development. She is chair of the Society for the Teaching of Psychology's Instructional Resource Awards Task Force and the author of "The Psychology Major's…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Family Counseling, Ethics, Clinical Psychology
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Munoz, Ricardo F.; Mendelson, Tamar – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2005
Clinical trials have seldom included adequate samples of people of color. Therefore, practitioners serving ethnic minorities often do not have access to readily available evidence-based interventions. This article summarizes the development and empirical evaluation of prevention and treatment manuals designed for low-income ethnic minority…
Descriptors: Prevention, Hospitals, Minority Groups, Intervention
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Baldwin, Scott A.; Murray, David M.; Shadish, William R. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2005
When treatments are administered in groups, clients interact in ways that lead to violations of a key assumption of most statistical analyses-the assumption of independence of observations. The resulting dependencies, when not properly accounted for, can increase Type I errors dramatically. Of the 33 studies of group-administered treatment on the…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Error Patterns, Clinical Psychology, Group Therapy
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Mallen, Michael J.; Vogel, David L. – Counseling Psychologist, 2005
The rejoinder responds to the four reactions by Jeffrey Barnett, Tai Chang, Delida Sanchez-Page, and Franz Caspar and Thomas Berger in the November 2005 issue of The Counseling Psychologist. In doing so, the authors emphasize the important need for further clarity regarding the effectiveness of online mental and behavioral health services in…
Descriptors: Counseling Psychology, Health Services, Internet, Counseling Effectiveness
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Cranney, Jacquelyn; Richardson, Rick; Ledgerwood, Lana – Learning & Memory, 2004
Anxiety disorders are among the most common psychological disturbances in the industrialized world. Current behavioral therapy procedures for these disorders are somewhat effective, but their efficacy could be substantially improved. Because these procedures are largely based on the process of extinction, manipulations that enhance extinction may…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Drug Therapy, Clinical Psychology, Data Interpretation
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Blanton, Hart; Jaccard, James – American Psychologist, 2006
Many psychological tests have arbitrary metrics but are appropriate for testing psychological theories. Metric arbitrariness is a concern, however, when researchers wish to draw inferences about the true, absolute standing of a group or individual on the latent psychological dimension being measured. The authors illustrate this in the context of 2…
Descriptors: Psychological Evaluation, Psychological Testing, Case Studies, Psychologists
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Engler, Patricia A.; Crowther, Janis H.; Dalton, Ginnie; Sanftner, Jennifer L. – Behavior Therapy, 2006
The purpose of this research was to examine and extend portions of the sociocultural model of bulimia nervosa (Stice, E. (1994). Review of the evidence for a sociocultural model of bulimia nervosa and an exploration of the mechanisms of action. "Clinical Psychology Review," 14, 633-661; Stice, E., & Agras, W. S. (1998). Predicting onset and…
Descriptors: Group Membership, Females, Eating Disorders, Behavior Modification
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Salmon, Karen – Clinical Psychologist, 2006
The use of toys in child clinical contexts is advocated by a number of researchers in the field as a means of overcoming developmental constraints on children's reports of their psychological states and their experiences. This paper reviews the literature relating to the impact of toys on children's ability to recall and communicate clinically…
Descriptors: Toys, Developmental Stages, Clinical Psychology, Recall (Psychology)
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Cargill, Kima; Kalikoff, Beth – Journal of General Education, 2007
To enhance student performance, prevent attrition, and build a learning community, two courses were linked together by requiring concurrent enrollment. "Writing Effectively," an upper-division composition course, was linked with "Abnormal Psychology," an upper-division clinical psychology course, requiring concurrent enrollment in both. In short,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Clinical Psychology, Writing Improvement, Integrated Curriculum
Aptekar, Lewis – 1990
A dilemma faces the ethnographer whose discipline forces the creation of an objective text from an intimate participatory experience. There have been three ways in which ethnographers have attempted to solve the dilemma of producing the objectivity of a scientific text while acknowledging their presence in the field. The first approach is the…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Data Collection, Essays, Ethnography
Tjeltveit, Alan C. – 1987
Clients with concurrent substance abuse and other psychopathology constitute an often neglected patient population which presents significant assessment and treatment challenges. Proper treatment requires a careful assessment of issues not always addressed in standard substance abuse or mental health treatment settings. Psychologists with…
Descriptors: Client Characteristics (Human Services), Clinical Diagnosis, Clinical Psychology, Counseling Techniques
Holzman, Lois – 1988
While established approaches to therapy help the individual adapt to an essentially fixed world, Social Therapy (a 15-year-old clinical, educational, and developmental psychology practiced in clinics and private practices in New York, Boston, and other cities, with applications to crisis, the epidemic of abuse, and educational failure) seeks to…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Counseling Theories, Developmental Psychology, Educational Psychology
Shaughnessy, Michael F. – 1984
This paper reviews the main research in the area of human reasoning and rational thinking to determine if man is either an "innately inefficient thinking machine" or if man's irrationality is "rooted in basic human nature," as Ellis (1976) suggests. The paper focuses on the work of two English theorists, Wason and…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Cognitive Processes, Counseling Theories, Developmental Psychology
Polkinghorne, Donald E. – 1985
Practicing psychologists use a variety of knowledge acquisition techniques and multiple knowledge structures when working with clients. Narrative knowing is one kind of knowledge, in which individual events are related by connecting them to a theme or a plot of which they are a part. Theme or plot is needed to unify the discrete events. A…
Descriptors: Clinical Psychology, Cognitive Style, Counseling Techniques, Counselor Training
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