Interventions Based on the Classical Conditioning Model

Strategies for interventions are derived from principles that affect behavior change: o   Learning o   Reinforcement o   Punishment

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Systematic Desensitization
Three Steps:1) establishing hierarchy of feared situation2) teaching relaxation3) pairing relaxation with feared situation/stimulus
start by having them in the same room as the feared object, take small steps, with each you are taught how to relax
- individual vividly imagines scenes from hierarchy while simultaneously relaxing- the process works through reciprocal inhibition, the idea that a person cannot be both nervous and relaxed at the same time
Exposure Technique
Same as systematic desensitization except it's right away
bring snake straight over instead of slowly through progressive steps
Counter Conditioning Technique
- used to change undesirable behaviors (sexual offenses, substance abuse) through negative means
> antabuse, makes you sick if you drink alcohol while taking it> food poisoning, you won't eat that food again> shock therapy
you associate that negative feeling with the stimulus
Operant Conditioning
- reinforcement increases the likelihood that a certain behavior is repeated- punishment decreases the likelihood that a certain behavior is repeated
- positive: add stimulus to cause behavior to be repeated- negative: remove stimulus to cause behavior to be repeated
Shaping
- reinforce successive approximations of the desired behavior
demonstration with chalkboard and hot & cold game
Other Behavioral Techniques
- problem solving- goal setting- self-monitoring- relaxation training > guided imagery > deep breathing- assertiveness training- time management
Stimulus Control
- remove undesired stimulus from your environment- stimulus narrowing: reduce frequency of desired behavior or put parameters around it- competing behaviors: do something that competes with unwanted behavior
chew gum at the end of a meal
Cognitive Behavioral Perspective
- external events affect our feeling and behaviors- our interpretations of external events affect our feelings and behaviors
someone gives you a dirty look, but really they're just squinting because they're not wearing their contacts!
Cognitive Restructuring
- everything can't be okay, its over you can't go back in time and change it, stop beating yourself up about it- perfectionism = the belief that you have to do the best and have the best, acceptance is key- catastrophising: thinking everything will be a catastrophe, but there's no evidence of it- self-depreciating: thinking you're not worthy, low self-esteem
Thought Stopping
- whatever thought is repeating in your mind, you scream stop, it interrupts the pattern- only in appropriate place/time- when you interrupt it, you have time to come up with a coping strategy
Rational Emotive Therapy ABC's
A) activating eventB) belief: evaluation of eventC) consequences (behavioral and emotional, stem from B)D) dispute through self-monitoring (detecting), challenging (debating) and discriminatingE) effectF) new feeling
overate during lunch, blew my diet, ate double my normal intake, feel disappointed
creates a behavior chain