I. Foundations of the Cognitive Model
1. Recovery-Oriented Cognitive Therapy for Schizophrenia: A
Personal Perspective, Aaron T. Beck
2. Three Myths and Truths about Beck’s Early Years, Rachael I.
Rosner
3. The Fundamental Cognitive Model, Keith S. Dobson, Julia C.
Poole, & Judith S. Beck
4. Outcome Studies in Cognitive Therapy, Steven D. Hollon & Robert
J. DeRubeis
II. Etiology and Mechanisms of Change
5. Schema Therapy, Arnoud Arntz
6. Emotional Schema Therapy: A Social-Cognitive Model, Robert L.
Leahy
7. Cognitive Vulnerability to Depression and Bipolar Disorder,
Lauren B. Alloy, Taylor A. Burke, Jared O’Garro-Moore, & Lyn Y.
Abramson
8. Cognitive Mediation of Symptom Change in Cognitive-Behavioral
Therapy: A Review of the Evidence, Stefan G. Hofmann, Joseph K.
Carpenter, & Joshua Curtiss
9. Mental Imagery in Cognitive Therapy: Research and Examples of
Imagery-Focused Emotion, Cognition, and Behavior Change, Fritz
Renner & Emily A. Holmes
10. Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy: Treatment Development from
a Common Cognitive Therapy Core, Zindel V. Segal & Amanda M.
Ferguson
III. Understanding and Treating Psychological Disorders
11. Cognitive Therapy for Insomnia, Nicole B. Gumport & Allison G.
Harvey
12. Cognitive-Behavioral Couple Therapy, Norman B. Epstein
13. Cognitive-Behavioral Family Therapy, Frank M. Dattilio &
Michelle Hanna Collins
14. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for the Reduction of Suicide Risk,
Cory F. Newman
15. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Bipolar Disorder, Sheri L.
Johnson & Andrew D. Peckham
16. Cognitive Therapy for Psychosis, Anthony P. Morrison &
Elizabeth Murphy
17. Advances in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Substance Use
Disorders and Addictive Behaviors, Bruce S. Liese & Jessica C.
Tripp
18. Cognitive Therapy for Anxiety, David A. Clark
19. Specialized Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for
Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder, Debbie Sookman
20. Cognitive Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Patricia
A. Resick
21. Cognitive Therapy for Personality Disorders, Denise D.
Davis
22. Concluding Thoughts, Robert L. Leahy
Robert L. Leahy, PhD, is Director of the American Institute for Cognitive Therapy in New York City and Clinical Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Dr. Leahy is Associate Editor of the International Journal of Cognitive Therapy and is past president of the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT), the International Association for Cognitive Psychotherapy, and the Academy of Cognitive and Behavioral Therapies (A-CBT). He is a recipient of the Outstanding Clinician Award from ABCT and the Aaron T. Beck Award from A-CBT. Dr. Leahy is author or editor of 29 books for mental health professionals and the general public, including If Only and The Worry Cure. His books have been translated into 21 languages.
"With an all-star cast of authors, Leahy has produced one of the
best volumes in recent years on key CBT concepts and treatment
methods. This book is rich with clinical wisdom and new insights.
Beginning with the opening chapter by Aaron T. Beck, readers are
treated to masterful accounts of CBT's depth, reach, and continuing
evolution."--Jesse H. Wright, MD, PhD, Professor and Kolb Endowed
Chair of Outpatient Psychiatry and Director, Depression Center,
University of Louisville
"Leahy has done it again. This fascinating book reviews the
foundations of classical cognitive therapy and brings them up to
date with the latest advances in science and practice. Contributors
elucidate the cognitive factors that make people vulnerable to
psychological disorders, describe how CBT strategies are used in
treatment, and show how changing cognitive styles and processes is
essential for improvement to occur. This book would be most useful
for a course on the theoretical foundations of cognitive
therapy."--Lata K. McGinn, PhD, Ferkauf Graduate School of
Psychology, Yeshiva University
"This volume offers a comprehensive understanding of where CBT has
been, where it is now, and where it is going. Refreshing, brisk,
and authoritative, the book presents novel, compelling theoretical
advances, and details their clinical and research applications. It
is a 'must have' for any clinician or researcher who works within
the CBT framework or is thinking about doing so. A riveting
read."--Christine Purdon, PhD, CPsych, Professor and Director of
Clinical Training, Department of Psychology, University of
Waterloo, Canada
"Leahy has assembled an outstanding group of
scientist-practitioners to provide a historical perspective as well
as an overview of the current status of CBT. The top-notch authors
present cognitive models of and treatment approaches for a range of
disorders. The evidence base for each approach is summarized in
easily accessible fashion, and clinical implications are clearly
described. This exceptional book is a marvelous resource for any
clinician or researcher who wants to learn more about CBT."--Sabine
Wilhelm, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School;
Chief of Psychology, Massachusetts General Hospital -This book,
authored by many prominent cognitive behavior therapy (CBT)
scholars, reviews 45 years of theory, practice, and efficacy of the
technique….This volume is a thorough review of CBT and belongs in
any collection available for practitioners and researchers.
Essential. Graduate students, researchers, and
professionals.--Choice Reviews, 11/1/2018
"With an all-star cast of authors, Leahy has produced one of the
best volumes in recent years on key CBT concepts and treatment
methods. This book is rich with clinical wisdom and new insights.
Beginning with the opening chapter by Aaron T. Beck, readers are
treated to masterful accounts of CBT's depth, reach, and continuing
evolution."--Jesse H. Wright, MD, PhD, Professor and Kolb Endowed
Chair of Outpatient Psychiatry and Director, Depression Center,
University of Louisville
"Leahy has done it again. This fascinating book reviews the
foundations of classical cognitive therapy and brings them up to
date with the latest advances in science and practice. Contributors
elucidate the cognitive factors that make people vulnerable to
psychological disorders, describe how CBT strategies are used in
treatment, and show how changing cognitive styles and processes is
essential for improvement to occur. This book would be most useful
for a course on the theoretical foundations of cognitive
therapy."--Lata K. McGinn, PhD, Ferkauf Graduate School of
Psychology, Yeshiva University
"This volume offers a comprehensive understanding of where CBT has
been, where it is now, and where it is going. Refreshing, brisk,
and authoritative, the book presents novel, compelling theoretical
advances, and details their clinical and research applications. It
is a 'must have' for any clinician or researcher who works within
the CBT framework or is thinking about doing so. A riveting
read."--Christine Purdon, PhD, CPsych, Professor and Director of
Clinical Training, Department of Psychology, University of
Waterloo, Canada
"Leahy has assembled an outstanding group of
scientist-practitioners to provide a historical perspective as well
as an overview of the current status of CBT. The top-notch authors
present cognitive models of and treatment approaches for a range of
disorders. The evidence base for each approach is summarized in
easily accessible fashion, and clinical implications are clearly
described. This exceptional book is a marvelous resource for any
clinician or researcher who wants to learn more about CBT."--Sabine
Wilhelm, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School;
Chief of Psychology, Massachusetts General Hospital -This book,
authored by many prominent cognitive behavior therapy (CBT)
scholars, reviews 45 years of theory, practice, and efficacy of the
technique….This volume is a thorough review of CBT and belongs in
any collection available for practitioners and researchers.
Essential. Graduate students, researchers, and
professionals.--Choice Reviews, 11/1/2018
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