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Peer reviewedParker, Carol L. – Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1975
Describes the use of systematic desensitization with a group to reduce anxiety about public speaking. (EJT)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Case Studies, Conditioning
Peer reviewedZemore, Robert – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1975
College students were treated with either a standard or modified version of systematic desensitization. Relative to a no-treatment control group, both treatment methods produced significant reductions in both the treated and untreated fears. The implications these findings have for two alternative conceptions of systematic desensitization are…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, College Students, Desensitization
Peer reviewedKanfer, Frederick H.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1975
Forty-five youngsters rehearsed one of three types of mediating response, involving different types of sentences. Analyses revealed that different training significantly influenced duration and intensity settings, with the "competence" group generally superior to the "stimulus" and "neutral" verbalization groups. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Children, Desensitization
Parker, Paul J. – 1973
The present study compared the effects of assertion with that of progressive relaxation training in systematic desensitization. Nineteen Ss were selected on the basis of exemplifying high debilitating test anxiety according to Alpert and Haber's (1960) Achievement Anxiety Test. Results showed that test anxious Ss who received either relaxation or…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Attitudes, Behavior, Behavior Change
Comstock, George – 1976
To some degree television is the current inheritor of anxiety over the effects of communications from outside the home, and is not alone among mass media in presenting sizeable amounts of violence. However the accessibility, pervasiveness, and very character of television make it the ultimate mass medium, and hence a cause for concern. Television…
Descriptors: Aggression, Desensitization, Fear, Social Behavior
Peer reviewedIsrael, Allen C.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1977
Snake- or spider-phobic subjects (N=32) were randomly assigned to one of four groups. Subjects receiving semantic desensitization therapy showed less posttest anxiety on the semantic differential than control subjects regardless of testing condition. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Counseling Effectiveness, Desensitization
Peer reviewedKowitt, Michael R.; Garske, John P. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1978
Investigated the effects of therapy modality and self-disclosure tendency and gender. High N=40 and 40 low scorers on a modified self-disclosure questionnaire were asked to rate audiotapes of simulated therapy sessions on several dimensions. High self-disclosers preferred client-centered therapy and low self-disclosers preferred systematic…
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Desensitization, Higher Education, Psychotherapy
Peer reviewedMcCarthy, Barry W. – Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 1977
In this paper 14 anxiety-reduction techniques are discussed. The sex therapist can integrate these techniques into the sex therapy contract with individuals or couples and use them either singly or in a sequential multiple technique format to reduce sexual anxiety. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Conditioning, Desensitization
Peer reviewedSotile, Wayne M.; And Others – Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 1977
This study investigates whether six women who previously had received 15 sessions of group systematic desensitization (SD) for their sexual anxiety would report additional treatment gains from participation in a sexual-enchantment workshop with their partners. The women reported a significant decrease in sexual anxiety. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Conditioning, Counseling Effectiveness
Peer reviewedMoss, Martin K.; Arend, Richard A. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1977
College-student snake phobics received one of four treatments to reduce their snake avoidance behavior. Behavioral and self-report assessment showed all three treatments relative to the control to be highly and equally effective in reducing snake avoidance behavior. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Problems, College Students, Desensitization
Denney, Douglas R.; Sullivan, Bernard J. – Journal of Counsulting and Clinical Psychology, 1976
Three types of therapy were combined with two types of scenes. Spider-phobic subjects were assigned to one of the six treatment conditions or to an untreated control group. In general, (a) Desensitization and modeling therapies were equally effective; (b) modeling alone was more effective than mere exposure to the phobic object. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, College Students, Conditioning, Desensitization
Peer reviewedFischer, Joel – Child Welfare, 1973
This article describes the basic procedures of the technique of systematic desensitization, and suggests that social welfare practitioners make use of this extensively tested approach to dysfunctional behavior. (ST)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Counseling, Desensitization
Peer reviewedOsterhouse, Robert A. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1972
This study compared the effectiveness of systematic desensitization and training in efficient study methods for reducing test anxiety among subjects selected on the basis of two types of self reported anxiety. Desensitization offered more promise as a treatment method for test anxiety than did training in study skills. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, College Students, Desensitization, Student Problems
Peer reviewedLent, Robert W.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1981
The efficacy of cue-controlled desensitization and systematic rational restructuring was compared with a placebo method and a waiting-list control in reducing public speaking and nontargeted anxieties. Cue-controlled desensitization was generally more effective than the other groups in reducing subjective speech anxiety. (Author)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Behavior Change, Comparative Analysis, Coping
Peer reviewedDeffenbacher, Jerry L.; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1979
Compared effects of relaxation as self-control and a self-control variant of systematic desensitization in reducing targeted (test anxiety) and nontargeted anxieties with those of wait-list and no-treatment expectancy controls. Groups given relaxation as self-control and modified desensitization reported less debilitating test anxiety than…
Descriptors: Anxiety, College Students, Coping, Desensitization


