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Stanton, Mark – American Psychologist, 2010
Comments on the article by Miller and Rose (September 2009). As Miller and Rose opened "the black box of treatment to examine linkages between processes of delivery and client outcomes" (p. 529) in motivational interviewing (MI), it is important that their model include factors from the social context that may explain conditions that enhance or…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Interviews, Interpersonal Relationship, Behavior Change
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Miller, William R.; Rose, Gary S. – American Psychologist, 2010
Responds to M. Stanton's comments on the current author's original article. One of the puzzles of motivational interviewing is why it works at all. How can it be that an individual interview or two yields change in a long-standing problem behavior even without any effort to alter social context? The time involved is such a tiny part of the…
Descriptors: Intervention, Behavior Modification, Interviews, Behavior Change
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Lazarus, Arnold A. – American Psychologist, 1977
Today, the term 'behavior therapy' has no clear denotation. Those who adhere to the more delimited meanings of behavior therapy tend to disregard significant nonbehavioral therapeutic development. They also overlook convincing data demonstrating that in adult humans, conditioning is produced through cognitive mediation. Adoption of a more…
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes, Conditioning
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Berkowitz, Leonard – American Psychologist, 1990
Proposes a cognitive-neoassociationistic model to account for the effects of negative affect on the development of angry feelings and the display of emotional aggression. Summarizes psychological studies that indicate that attention to one's negative feelings can lead to a regulation of the overt effects of the negative affect. (FMW)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Aggression, Anger, Association (Psychology)