The Scientist Practitioner: Research and Accountability in Clinical and Educational Settings |
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findings from the science of psychology as well as the capability of critically evaluating those findings as they appear , then this does not necessarily require research productivity or even the process of dissertation research .
findings from the science of psychology as well as the capability of critically evaluating those findings as they appear , then this does not necessarily require research productivity or even the process of dissertation research .
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If practitioners at least consumed research , this would fulfill Peterson's ( 1976a , 1976b ) definition of the professional who has been trained to evaluate and sift through the various research findings in order to glean from these ...
If practitioners at least consumed research , this would fulfill Peterson's ( 1976a , 1976b ) definition of the professional who has been trained to evaluate and sift through the various research findings in order to glean from these ...
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dicated that this finding was equally and dramatically true for clients with severe phobias , such as agoraphobia , as well as for ... This is a very impressive body of programmatic research findings that , in and of itself , gives ...
dicated that this finding was equally and dramatically true for clients with severe phobias , such as agoraphobia , as well as for ... This is a very impressive body of programmatic research findings that , in and of itself , gives ...
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RESEARCH STRATEGIES AND THE ROLE | 38 |
Practical and Realistic Measures of Change | 69 |
SELFMONITORING | 89 |
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activity addition alternative analysis answer anxiety applied approach asked assessment attempt Barlow baseline behavior chapter clear client clinical clinical replication clinician collected compared comparison Consider consistent continue course depression described determine direct effects elements evaluation examine example experience experimental factors failures fear Figure findings frequency given goals headache important improvement increase individual intervention issue knowledge logic measures ment methodology methods multiple natural noted observation occur particular patient period phase change possible practice practitioners present problem procedures produce professional progress psychology questionnaires questions reasons recorded replication reported response scale seen self-monitoring self-recording sessions settings sexual shown significant similar situation social specific strategy subjects success systematic taken therapist therapy tion treat treatment usually validity variability