Institution
York University
Education•Toronto, Ontario, Canada•
About: York University is a education organization based out in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Politics. The organization has 18899 authors who have published 43357 publications receiving 1568560 citations.
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15 Aug 2005TL;DR: Greenberg and Watson as mentioned in this paper provided a manual for the emotion-focused treatment (EFT) of depression, which was supported by studies in which EFT for depression was compared with Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Client-Centered Therapy, and then both.
Abstract: In "Emotion-Focused Therapy for Depression," Leslie S. Greenberg and Jeanne C. Watson, well-regarded scholars and leading figures in the field, provide a manual for the emotion-focused treatment (EFT) of depression. Their approach is supported by studies in which EFT for depression was compared with Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Client-Centered Therapy, and then both. The approach has been refined to apply specifically to the treatment of this pervasive and often intractable disorder. The authors discuss the nature of depression and its treatment, examine the role of emotion, present a schematic model of depression and an overview of the course of treatment, and suggest who might benefit. Written with a practical focus rather than the more academic theoretical style of previous books that established the theoretical grounds and scientific viability of working with emotion in psychotherapy, this book aims to introduce practitioners to the idea of using this approach to work with a depressed population. The book covers theory, case formulation, treatment, and research in a way that makes this complex form of therapy accessible to all readers. Particularly valuable are the case examples, which demonstrate the deliberate and skillful use of techniques to leverage emotional awareness and thus bring about change.
258 citations
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TL;DR: Over a 14-year follow-up period, negative complete colonoscopy was associated with a subsequent reduced incidence of CRC overall, and of incident CRC in the distal colon, however, the reduction in incidence of proximal CRC differed in magnitude and timing, and occurred in half the follow- up years, mainly after 7 years of follow-ups.
258 citations
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TL;DR: The encouraging results of this study provide a strong rationale for a long-term, randomized, clinical trial to determine whether this home BP tele-management system improves BP control in the community among patients with uncontrolled hypertension.
258 citations
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TL;DR: Examination of observable moment-by-moment steps in emotional processing as they occurred within productive sessions of experiential therapy produced a model showing global distress, fear, shame, and aggressive anger as undifferentiated and insufficiently processed emotions.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to examine observable moment-by-moment steps in emotional processing as they occurred within productive sessions of experiential therapy. Global distress was identified as an unprocessed emotion with high arousal and low meaningfulness. The investigation consisted of 2 studies as part of a task analysis that examined clients processing distress in live video-recorded therapy sessions. Clients in both studies were adults in experiential therapy for depression and ongoing interpersonal problems. Study 1 was the discovery-oriented phase of task analysis, which intensively examined 6 examples of global distress. The qualitative findings produced a model showing: global distress, fear, shame, and aggressive anger as undifferentiated and insufficiently processed emotions; the articulation of needs and negative self-evaluations as a pivotal step in change; and assertive anger, self-soothing, hurt, and grief as states of advanced processing. Study 2 tested the model using a sample of 34 clients in global distress. A multivariate analysis of variance showed that the model of emotional processing predicted positive in-session effects, and bootstrapping analyses were used to demonstrate that distinct emotions emerged moment by moment in predicted sequential patterns.
258 citations
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258 citations
Authors
Showing all 19301 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Dan R. Littman | 157 | 426 | 107164 |
Martin J. Blaser | 147 | 820 | 104104 |
Aaron Dominguez | 147 | 1968 | 113224 |
Gregory R Snow | 147 | 1704 | 115677 |
Joseph E. LeDoux | 139 | 478 | 91500 |
Kenneth Bloom | 138 | 1958 | 110129 |
Osamu Jinnouchi | 135 | 885 | 86104 |
Steven A. Narod | 134 | 970 | 84638 |
David H. Barlow | 133 | 786 | 72730 |
Elliott Cheu | 133 | 1219 | 91305 |
Roger Moore | 132 | 1677 | 98402 |
Wendy Taylor | 131 | 1252 | 89457 |
Stephen P. Jackson | 131 | 372 | 76148 |
Flera Rizatdinova | 130 | 1242 | 89525 |
Sudhir Malik | 130 | 1669 | 98522 |