Despite the short period of time, the therapy yielded a number of interesting results, such as a change in the degree of cognitive complexity with regard to the patients' experience of affect or the dominance of separation anxiety in connection with aggressive impulses and guilt feelings....
Separating the mouth and nose is necessary for numerous reasons, too many to detail here. Compromising this separation can affect speech (and other functions). The hard palate, a piece of the maxilla (upper jaw) bone that fuses while a child is in utero, separates the mouth (oral cavity) ...
Interpersonal psychotherapy often looks at a person’s mental, social, and physical vulnerabilities, as well as cultural and spiritual factors. It often considers interpersonal relationships and social roles and the ways these factors can affect mental health disorders. Interpersonal psychotherapy frequently...
In stage five, therapists help clients to frame solutions to their problems via solution-building conversations. The focus of such conversations is on how clients are addressing their problems rather than on the problems themselves (Smith, 2006). In other words, the client who is working to impr...
is one of the oldest theories in psychology and influences many modern schools of thought. There are hundreds of therapy modalities available, so consider reaching out to a therapist to learn more about each and learn unique psychological techniques that have been proven effective for over a ...
associative singing, the client communicates his or her feelings by singing sounds and words that he or she chooses; the therapist repeats what the client is singing, mirroring and supporting the client. For example, if the client sings, ‘I am angry!’ the therapist repeats back ‘I am ...
This is a narrative task during which participants need to construct stories (six items for six stories) with prompt words that loosely suggest a secure base script, due to participants who know the script cannot suppress telling secure base script stories. The stories are then coded by trained...
For psychoanalytic theory, this emphasis on embodiment or 'bodiliness' and affect is of crucial importance in that it completes an emphasis on finding words for affects. An interplay of restoring the link with the affectively experienced body 鈥 in itself a process in which language plays an ...
Signs of transference include, but are not limited to, unexplained or unjustified strong emotional reactions to a therapist’s words or actions and daydreaming about the therapist in a non-therapy setting. What is transference in therapy? Exploring positive and negative transference A patient’s ...
Compared with cognitive normal people, AD patients usually speak more slowly with more pauses between words [7] and suffer from word finding and word retrieval difficulties [6, 8, 9]. Dozens of speech-based methods have been explored for the research on AD detection. Studies have shown that ...