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Goal attainment in individual and group-based neuropsychological interventions for young adults with dyslexia in a randomized controlled trial
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Foundations of Familiar Language. Formulaic Expressions, Lexical Bundles, and Collocations at Work and Play
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Impaired executive functioning mediates the association between aging and deterministic sequence learning
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder in Adolescence: Preliminary Appraisal Based on a Case Study Approach
Clinical Case Studies, Volume 22, Issue 4, Page 343-362, August 2023.
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is characterized by marked and persistent fear in social situations in which one may be exposed and/or anticipates being exposed to external evaluation and in which embarrassment/humiliation may occur. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) has been showing promising results in several disorders, including adult SAD. Considering this evidence and given that adolescence is typically the age of onset for SAD, we developed the ACT@TeenSAD, which is a manualized approach to adolescent SAD delivered via videoconference. It encompasses 10 weekly, 90-minute sessions targeting core pathological processes and fostering higher levels of psychological flexibility; it also includes two booster sessions. The current work illustrates the case conceptualization and therapeutic trajectory of a 17-year-old adolescent (Josie; pseudonym) with a 5-year history of SAD that underwent the ACT@TeenSAD. During the course of the intervention, Josie found purpose and learned life skills to cope with adversity, especially in socially relevant situations. This aligns with the pre- to post-intervention progress shown by Josie (using the Reliable Change Index), particularly in measures assessing acceptance, psychological inflexibility, and self-reported social anxiety. Josie’s case study gives preliminary evidence of the acceptability and feasibility of the ACT@TeenSAD, making it a helpful tool for therapists to become familiarized with. The current work also discusses the limitations of the intervention and presents practical challenges and suggestions thought to be useful for therapists.
Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is characterized by marked and persistent fear in social situations in which one may be exposed and/or anticipates being exposed to external evaluation and in which embarrassment/humiliation may occur. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) has been showing promising results in several disorders, including adult SAD. Considering this evidence and given that adolescence is typically the age of onset for SAD, we developed the ACT@TeenSAD, which is a manualized approach to adolescent SAD delivered via videoconference. It encompasses 10 weekly, 90-minute sessions targeting core pathological processes and fostering higher levels of psychological flexibility; it also includes two booster sessions. The current work illustrates the case conceptualization and therapeutic trajectory of a 17-year-old adolescent (Josie; pseudonym) with a 5-year history of SAD that underwent the ACT@TeenSAD. During the course of the intervention, Josie found purpose and learned life skills to cope with adversity, especially in socially relevant situations. This aligns with the pre- to post-intervention progress shown by Josie (using the Reliable Change Index), particularly in measures assessing acceptance, psychological inflexibility, and self-reported social anxiety. Josie’s case study gives preliminary evidence of the acceptability and feasibility of the ACT@TeenSAD, making it a helpful tool for therapists to become familiarized with. The current work also discusses the limitations of the intervention and presents practical challenges and suggestions thought to be useful for therapists.
Attention problems and off-topic verbosity among young adult and older adult age cohorts
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Experiences of family therapists working with parents after the forced removal of children: What can the contextual model tell us?
Atypical procedural learning skills in children with Developmental Coordination Disorder
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Neuropsychological assessment with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer/questioning (LGBTQ+) individuals: Practice, education, and training survey
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