Buch, Englisch, 2564 Seiten, Format (B × H): 260 mm x 150 mm, Gewicht: 6710 g
Buch, Englisch, 2564 Seiten, Format (B × H): 260 mm x 150 mm, Gewicht: 6710 g
Reihe: Sage Benchmarks in Psychology
ISBN: 978-1-4462-4701-3
Verlag: SAGE PUBN
Clinical psychology is a vast area of research, on an international stage, fundamentally addressing psychological problems or disorders from an assessment, diagnostic and interventionist point of view. This complex field of science studies a mix of complex client groups (children to the elderly) and a variety of different perspectives of study (from neuropsychology to psychotherapy perspectives). Clinical Psychology, Eight-Volume Set focuses on the process of clinical work. Clinical Psychology I: Assessment and Formulation covering the process of assessing clients looking at diagnostics, measures and formulation of presenting problems based on clear theoretical models. Clinical Psychology II: Treatments and Interventions concentrate on treatments and interventions based on the surfeit of clinical, cognitive and neuropsychological models for patient care. Clinical Psychology I: Assessment and Formulation These four volumes cover the areas of assessment of presenting problems within the field of clinical psychology (including diagnosis, testing, interpretation, psychometrics, instruments, measures and clinical significance), and the formulation of presenting problems within particular theoretical models (such as psychodynamic models - attachment theory; cognitive models of diagnostic presentations; case formulation approach). The combination of these two key terms provides the necessary base for highlighting the range and sophistication of psychological approaches to these areas allowing a focus on the traditional 'diagnostic' approach but also a wider and more diverse approach beyond diagnosis. Accordingly, these four volumes capture a breadth of psychological theory that would otherwise be lost. Clinical Psychology II: Treatments and Interventions These four volumes cover the areas of treatments and interventions. The former targets treatments which are based on a specific theory (for example psychoanalytic, psychodynamic, interpersonal, cognitive, experiential and humanistic) as well as treatment approaches which have been specifically associated with a focused diagnosis (e.g., cognitive therapy for panic disorder). The latter targets interventions which are less specifically associated with diagnostic categories or theoretical models and are often based on features of service settings (for example primary care or forensic settings). These four volumes reflect the diversity of applications of clinical psychology by considering treatments and interventions in adult, children and adolescents, older adults, and families and also cover interventions relating to areas such a neuropsychology (e.g., brain injury).
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CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY 1: ASSESSMENT AND FORMULATION
VOLUME ONE: FOUNDATIONS OF ASSESSMENT
PART ONE: HISTORY OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Clinical Psychology - Lightner Witmer
A Brief History of Clinical Psychology - Robert Watson
What Is Clinical Psychology? - David Shakow
PART TWO: CONTEXT AND CULTURE
A Culture?Free Intelligence Test I - Raymond Cattell
Sex?Role Stereotypes and Clinical Judgements of Mental Health - Inge Broverman et al
On Being Sane in Insane Places - David Rosenhan
Rediscovery of the Subject - Enrico Jones and Avril Thorne
Intercultural Approaches to Clinical Assessment
PART THREE: CONCEPTUAL ISSUES IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY ASSESSMENT
The Myth of Illness - Thomas Szasz
Schizotaxia, Schizotypy, Schizophrenia - Paul Meehl
PART FOUR: DIAGNOSIS ISSUES AND DEBATES
Psychiatric Diagnosis - Edward Zigler and Leslie Phillips
A Critique
The Advantages of Studying Psychological Phenomena Rather Than Psychiatric Diagnoses - Jacqueline Persons
The Multidimensional Nature of Schizotypal Traits - R.P. Bentall, G.S. Claridge and P.D. Slade
A Factor Analytic Study with Normal Subjects
Categorical versus Dimensional Classification - Thomas Widiger
Implications from and for Research
Recovery from Mental Illness - William Anthony
The Guiding Vision of the Mental-Health Service System in the 1990s
PART FIVE: CASE FORMULATION METHODS
Multimodal Behavior Therapy - Arnold Lazarus
Treating the 'Basic Id'
Clinicians Can Agree in Assessing Relationship Patterns in Psychotherapy - Paul Crits-Christoph et al
The Core Conflictual Relationship Theme Method
Psychodynamic and Cognitive? Behavioral Formulations of a Single Case - Jacqueline Persons, John Curtis and George Silberschatz
Is Cognitive Case Formulation Science or Science Fiction? - Peter Bieling and Wilem Kuyken
VOLUME TWO: ASSESSMENT: CLINICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES
PART ONE: PROJECTIVE TECHNIQUES
A Method for Investigating Fantasies - Christiana Morgan and Henry Murray
The Thematic Apperception Test
Three Rorschach Interpretations - Hermann Rorschach
PART TWO: OBSERVATIONAL/BEHAVIOR
The Relevance of Reliability and Validity for Behavioural Assessment - John Cone
Considerations in the Choice Inter-Observer Reliability Estimates - Donald Hartmann
The Treatment Utility of Assessment - Steven Hayes, Rosemery Nelson and Robin Jarrett
A Functional Approach Evaluating Assessment Quality
PART THREE: DIAGNOSTIC AND CLINICAL INTERVIEWS
The Concept of a 'Case' in Psychiatric Population Surveys - J.K. Wing et al
Psychiatric Interviewing Techniques IV: Experimental Study: Four Contrasting Style - Michael Rutter et al
Satisfaction, Compliance and Communication - Philip Ley
PART FOUR: PSYCHOMETRICS: VALIDITY, RELIABILITY AND MEANING
Construct Validity in Psychological Tests - Lee Cronbach and Paul Meehl
Convergent and Discriminant Validation by the Multitrait-Multimethod Matrix - Donald Campbell and Donald Fiske
Intra-Class Correlations - Patrick Shout and Joseph Fleiss
Uses in Assessing Rater Reliability
Clinical versus Actuarial Judgment - Robyn Dawes, David Faust and Paul Meehl
Clinical Significance - Neil Jacobson and Paula Truax
A Statistical Approach to Defining Meaningful Change in Psychotherapy Research
PART FIVE: SINGLE CASE METHODS
The Single Case in Clinical?Psychological Research - M.B. Shapiro
Drawing Valid Inferences from Case Studies - Alan Kazdin
PART SIX: CASE STUDY APPROACHES
Case Study Approach in Neuropsychological Research - Tim Shallice
Toward a Functional Analysis of Self-Injury - Brian Iwata et al
PART SEVEN: QUALITATIVE APPROACHES
The Judged, not the Judges - Robert Bogdan and Steven Taylor
An View of Mental Retardation
Evolving Guidelines for Publication of Qualitative Research Studies in Psychology and Related Fields - Robert Elliott, Constance Fischer and David Re