List of cognitive–behavioral therapies
Appearance
Cognitive behavioral therapy is an umbrella term that encompasses many therapeutical approaches, techniques and systems.
- Acceptance and commitment therapy is a "third wave" cognitive behavior therapy, developed by Steven C. Hayes based in part on relational frame theory.
- Anxiety management training was developed by Suinn and Richardson (1971) for helping clients control their anxiety by the use of relaxation and other skills.[1]
- Applied behavior analysis, described by Baer, Wolf and Risley in 1968,[2] is the science of applying experimentally derived principles of behavior to improve socially significant behavior.
- Behavioral activation is a behavioral approach to treating depression, developed by Neil Jacobson and others.
- Behavior modification is a term originally used by Edward Thorndike in 1911.
- Behavior therapy
- Cognitive therapy was developed by Aaron Beck.
- Cognitive analytic therapy
- Cognitive behavior modification
- Cognitive behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy
- Cognitive emotional behavioral therapy
- Cognitive processing therapy for Post traumatic stress disorder
- Compassion focused therapy
- Computerised cognitive behavioral therapy
- Contingency management
- Dialectical behavior therapy
- Direct therapeutic exposure
- Exposure and response prevention
- Functional analytic psychotherapy
- Metacognitive therapy
- Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
- Multimodal therapy
- Problem-solving therapy[1]
- Prolonged exposure therapy
- Rational emotive behavior therapy, formerly called rational therapy and rational emotive therapy,[3] was founded by Albert Ellis.[1]
- Reality therapy
- Relapse prevention
- Schema therapy
- Self-control therapy
- Self-instructional training was developed by Donald Meichenbaum, influenced by the developmental psychology of Alexander Luria and Lev Vygotsky, designed to treat the mediational deficiencies of impulsive children.[1]
- Stress inoculation training[1]
- Systematic desensitization is an anxiety reduction technique, developed by Joseph Wolpe.
- Systematic rational restructuring was an attempt by Marvin Goldfried to reanalyze systematic desensitization in terms of cognitive mediation and coping skills.[1]
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f Dobson, Keith S.; Dozois, David J. A. (2008). "Historical and Philosophical Bases of the Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies". In Dobson, Keith S. (ed.). Handbook of cognitive-behavioral therapies (3rd ed.). New York: Guilford Press. pp. 3–39. ISBN 1-57230-601-7.
- ^ Baer DM, Wolf MM, Risley TR (1968). "Some current dimensions of applied behavior analysis". J Appl Behav Anal. 1 (1): 91–7. doi:10.1901/jaba.1968.1-91. PMC 1310980. PMID 16795165.
- ^ Reason and Emotion in Psychotherapy, Ellis, 1962