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An investigation of extreme responding as a mediator of cognitive therapy for depression

Posted on:2009-10-26Degree:M.ScType:Thesis
University:University of Calgary (Canada)Candidate:Ching, Laurie EFull Text:PDF
GTID:2440390005961006Subject:Clinical Psychology
Abstract/Summary:
Although the efficacy of Cognitive Therapy (CT) is well documented, questions remain about the conditions under which CT is maximally effective, and the mechanisms by which CT is efficacious. This study examined the role of extreme responding (ER) as a mediator and predictor of relapse, as well as a predictor of acute treatment outcome. To test mediation, ER of participants in CT was compared to ER of participants receiving Behavioral Activation (BA). Results indicated that ER was not a mediator of relapse in either condition, and only extreme specific global attributions at the completion of treatment predicted relapse in the CT group. Both CT and BA showed non-significant reduction in depression severity, however neither group showed significant changes in ER over the course of treatment. Finally, ER did not predict or moderate acute treatment outcome. The implications of these results, strengths and limitations of the current study, and future research directions are discussed.
Keywords/Search Tags:Extreme, Mediator
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