Models Terminology-Narrative Therapy – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Working Through
answer
From psychodynamic therapy, insight leads clients to engage in new and more productive ways of behaving and interacting.
question
Vulnerability Stress Model (Diathesis Stress Model)
answer
The notion that while some people have a predisposition or inherited vulnerability to a mental illness, the actual manifestation of the illness is determined by life events, particularly stressful events in the family.
question
visitor
answer
From solution-focused therapy, one of three ways to characterize the client's level of participation and commitment to change. A visitor does not bring a specific problem to therapy and does not have a commitment to participating productively in treatment.
question
Unstoried Competencies
answer
From narrative therapy, those competencies that the client possesses which are not part of his/her dominant story and therefore are not expressed until the dominant story is reconstructed (see Subjugated Stories).
question
Utopian Syndrome
answer
From Watzlawick's book Change, the myth sometimes brought with clients to therapy that suggests that a single intervention might somehow solve all the client systems problems, that notion that one can mishandle problems by embracing a single, all encompassing solution. This can lead to clients therapist or solution shopping to fulfill the fantasy.
question
Unique Outcomes
answer
From narrative therapy, instances in which the client did not experience the problem for which he/she seeks therapy. These exceptions to the problem (Sparkling Events) are highlighted in the therapy to counteract a problem-saturated outlook.
question
Unfinished Business
answer
From experiential therapy, originally a concept of Gestalt therapist Fritz Perls, referring to unresolved feelings or disowned parts of the self.
question
Undifferentiated Family Ego Mass
answer
From Bowenian family therapy, a phenomenon in which family members are emotionally fused, highly reactive, and structurally chaotic. Emotions overwhelm the intellect and interfere with individual functioning in family members. (see Differentiation Of Self).
question
Unconditional Positive
answer
Regard A therapeutic stance originated by Humanist, Carl Rogers, and used by therapists in emotionally focused couples therapy in order to create a safe environment where primary feelings can be revealed.
question
Unbalancing
answer
A structural technique designed to disrupt a dysfunctional sequence by lending greater support to one side of a conflict than the other.
question
Triangulation
answer
From Bowenian family therapy, a dysfunctional process in which an unresolved conflict between two people (often parents) is extended to include a third person (often their child), whose loyalty is fought over.
question
Triangle
answer
A Bowenian concept that refers to the smallest stable emotional unit in a family and describes a process by which two people will recruit a third person into the system to mediate the level of conflict or tension between them.
question
Transference
answer
A psychoanalytic term to describe the client's unconscious tendency to attribute to the therapist unresolved drives, attitudes, feelings, and fantasies from previous (often parental) relationships.
question
Transactions
answer
From contextual theory, the patterns of family organization — hierarchy, triangles, and transactional sequences.
question
Transaction
answer
A transaction is the exchange of information between two parties to carry out financialor administrative activities related to health care. (See HIPAA Transaction Rule)
question
Tracking
answer
From structural family therapy, an engagement technique in which the therapist participates in the existing family dynamic, while privately noting the dysfunctional or unbalanced processes being enacted. The therapist must assume the "median" position - paying attention to him/herself while engaging with the family.
question
Token Economy
answer
A behavioral program in which secondary reinforcers are dispensed for desirable behaviors. The items can later be redeemed for desired items.
question
Time Out (Time Out From Reinforcement)
answer
A behavioral technique used to extinguish (eliminate) undesirable behaviors by removing the person from a situation in which the behavior is unlikely to be reinforced.
question
Third-Order Change
answer
Gregory Bateson's term for a dramatic transformation in thinking (see First-Order Change and Second-Order Change)
question
Therapist Stance
answer
The therapist's position (engagement style) in relation to both the family system and therapist's theoretical foundation, for example an engaged style in which the therapist tends to disclose personal experiences or disengaged in which the therapist remains emotionally distant.
question
Therapeutic Paradox
answer
From strategic family therapy, an intervention which entails maneuvers that appear to contradict the goals of therapy, yet are actually designed to achieve them (see Prescribing the Symptom & Pretending).
question
Therapeutic Neutrality
answer
From object relations family therapy, an atmosphere of nonjudgmental exploration. The therapist is not tied to a specific outcome other than insight and working through.
question
Therapeutic Letters
answer
From narrative therapy, a procedure created by Epston, used to extend the therapy in which the therapist summarizes in writing the client's competencies with respect to overcoming the problem and acknowledges the sparkling events.
question
Therapeutic Double Bind
answer
A type of paradoxical technique in which clients are instructed to continue to have the symptom. They are then caught in a bind since to continue the symptom willfully demonstrates that they have control over a symptom that they previously experienced as involuntary.
question
Therapeutic Certificates
answer
From narrative therapy, certificates given to the client or family announcing the client's victory over the problem, which he/she shows to others and reviews, if he/she again feels the effects of the problem.
question
Termination
answer
The end of the contractual relationship between the therapist and client or family. It may be formal and final or flexible. In some therapies it is initiated by the therapist, but in others the therapist follows the family's lead. In brief prescriptive therapies, the therapist initiates termination when the presenting problem is eliminated or when the agreed-upon number of sessions is reached. Other therapeutic models do not conceive of termination as final. Clients and families may return to treatment when a new problem appears or an old problem reappears.
question
Temporal Sequencing
answer
The chronological order in which family behaviors occur.
question
Temperature Reading
answer
A therapeutic technique of Satir, in which family members express their hopes and wishes each day between sessions to show their appreciation of one another and discuss complaints and solutions.
question
Teaming Roles
answer
From symbolic-experiential family therapy, the notion that there are no well members in a dysfunctional family. Members who present as healthy may be paired with more obviously symptomatic members. For example, the apparently well person may be a white knight to the family, sacrificing his/her sense of self.
question
Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California (Duty to Warn)
answer
A court ruling, adopted by most jurisdictions, that states that when a therapist determines, or should determine, that his/her client presents a serious threat of harm to a specifically identified other person, he/she has an obligation to use reasonable care to protect the intended victim against such danger.
question
Systematic Desensitization
answer
From Wolpe, a behavioral therapy technique for reducing the capacity of conditioned stimuli or activities to evoke anxiety. The therapist first instructs the client to arrange various anxiety-provoking stimuli or activities on a hierarchy rated according to a Subjective Units or Discomfort Scale (SUDS) (e.g., planning a trip that requires crossing a bridge; driving toward the bridge; driving on the bridge; walking onto the bridge). The therapist teaches the client to induce a state of relaxation, then pairs the relaxation response with the anxiety-provoking stimuli, working progressively up the hierarchy.
question
System
answer
A bounded set of interrelated elements with coherent and patterned behavior. Open systems exchange information and resources with their environment, while closed systems restrict such exchanges.
question
Syntax
answer
The form of a message.
question
Symptom Prescription
answer
From MRI strategic therapy, a treatment technique in which the therapist asks the family to continue to perform or even expand a symptom. The intervention may be compliance based if the therapist wants the family to do as suggested or defiance based when he/she wants the family to defy the directive.
question
Symmetrical
answer
From Jackson and the MRI Group, the opposite of Complementarity, a relationship in which there is a relatively equal distribution of control and power, often resulting in rapid escalation of conflict.
question
Symbolic-Experiential Family Therapy
answer
A theory and therapeutic approach developed by Whitaker in which the therapist uses his/her own experience and craziness, to influence family members' internal meanings, thereby changing dysfunctional patterns.
question
Sweat Boxes
answer
From Hoffman, a mild or severe threat to the continuity of the relationship and the system, a possible precondition to morphogenesis.
question
Survival Skills Workshops
answer
A psychoeducational program for families coping with mental illness in a member. In these workshops, groups of families learn about the etiology, prognosis, psychobiology, and treatment of the illness and learn ways the family can deal with its special demands.
question
Suprasystem
answer
A higher-level system, such as a community, in which other systems are components
question
Suicidal Ideation
answer
Images, thoughts, and feelings about committing suicide, often including ways to accomplish it and how it might affect others.
question
Suicide
answer
Intentionally taking one's own life.
question
Subsystem
answer
In structural family therapy, an organized component of a system which has a specific role in the functioning of the larger system and is somewhat autonomous from it, for example, a parental subsystem or sibling subsystem.
question
Substance Abuse
answer
A wide range of inappropriate and usually excessive ingestion of mind altering (psychoactive) chemicals such as alcohol or drugs (prescription, over the counter, or illicit).
question
Subjugated Stories
answer
From narrative therapy, stories about the client that are obscured by the dominant story. Some subjugated stories are helpful and others are not. Narrative therapists help clients construct a new, more helpful story, which includes unstoried competencies.
question
Subjective Units of Discomfort (SUDS)
answer
A scale used by behavioral therapists on which the client's rate their level of anxiety to a stimulus or situation.
question
Structure
answer
The interrelationship among system elements that make up the organization of the system. In first-order change, structures can be affected without altering the organization of the system; whereas, in second-order change the organization's rules and structure are changed.
question
Structural Family Therapy
answer
The theory and therapeutic model developed by Minuchin, which focuses on family organization and boundaries and the ways in which these structures govern interactional patterns. Dysfunction, in this model, stems from boundaries that are either too rigid or too diffuse, both of which prevent the system and its subsystems from achieving goals.
question
Strategic Humanism
answer
Haley and Madanes's more recent model is oriented toward increasing family members' ability to soothe and love rather than to gain control over one another.
question
Strategic Family Therapy
answer
A theory and therapeutic model developed by Haley and Madanes, with interventions that focus directly on changing the presenting problem. Therapy typically begins with the therapist first assessing disorders in the system's hierarchies and/or the dysfunctional coalitions that maintain the symptom. Interventions, given as directives, may be straightforward or paradoxical. Therapy is not growth-oriented, but change-oriented, and the therapist takes responsibility for the success or failure of the outcome.
question
Stop-Start Technique (Squeeze Technique)
answer
A method of sex therapy developed by Semans for the treatment of premature ejaculation. The client's partner is asked to stimulate his penis until he begins to feel premonitory sensations of orgasm. He then instructs his partner to stop and the cycle is repeated. The method helps the client concentrate on preorgasmic sensations rather than suppressing them.
question
Streptic Communication
answer
From communication theory, communicating through sounds such as whistles, claps.
question
Stepparent
answer
A person who marries someone with children from a prior relationship.
question
Split Filial Loyalty
answer
From contextual theory, if parents require the child to choose between them, the child must be loyal to one at the expense of his/her loyalty to the other. The child becomes symptomatic as he/she attempts to bring the parents together.
question
Spectatoring
answer
A disorder of sexual functioning caused by monitoring one's performance. It contributes to performance anxiety.
question
Sparkling Events
answer
From narrative therapy, those events that exemplify the client's preferred outcome rather than his/her problem saturated stories.
question
Solution-Focused Family Therapy
answer
Theory and therapeutic model in the tradition of brief therapy, developed by Berg and de Shazer, which focuses on finding solutions rather than understanding the problem. The model evolved from the MRI group's focus on problems and from the postmodern interest in the construction of reality. Clients are encouraged increase behaviors that work well and notice situations in which the problem does not occur.
question
Solid Self
answer
From Bowenian theory, a person who is well differentiated and is able to function based upon a personally defined set of values, beliefs, convictions, and life principles.
question
Social Reinforcer
answer
From operant conditioning, social interactions (rather than material reinforcers) such as praise, approval, nagging, or yelling that increase the frequency of a behavior.
question
Social Constructivist Family Therapy
answer
A group of postmodern therapeutic approaches based on the concept that reality is an intersubjective phenomenon that is constructed in conversation. The theories have been referred to as: postmodern, collaborative, constructivist, narrative, reflexive, and second-order cybernetic.
question
Simple Bind
answer
From Hoffman, a mechanism for change in which a message or request is given and the recipient's new behavior is rewarded. Distinguished from a double bind in which the nature of the message insures that no response will be rewarded. A double bind is a simple bind that is continually imposed and then continually lifted.
question
SIDS - Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
answer
The unexplained death of an apparently healthy infant. The actual cause of death may be unknown, but certain risk factors have been identified such as immature lungs, apnea, sleep arousal problems; placing the infant on his/her stomach to sleep, soft bedding, etc. The incidence of SIDS has decreased since parents have been advised to place infants on their backs to sleep.
question
Shaping Competence
answer
From structural therapy, a method of increasing family members' confidence in being able to solve their problems by pointing out what they have done right, rather than focusing on mistakes.
question
Shaping
answer
A behavioral procedure in which successive approximations to a desired, often more complex, behavior are reinforced until the desired behavior is achieved.
question
Sexual Orientation
answer
A description of the gender or genders of people to whom one is sexually attracted.
question
Sexual Dysfunction
answer
An impaired physiological response preventing a person from full sexual functioning.
question
Sexual Disorder
answer
Disorders of sexual functioning caused by psychological factors such as anxiety, beliefs, or perceptions.
question
Sex Therapy
answer
Pioneered by Masters and Johnson, Kaplan, and LoPiccolo. Treatment that focuses on the client's or couple's sexual functioning; often combined with couple's therapy.
question
Separation
answer
1) From a psychoanalytic perspective, the emotional transformation of the parent permitting the child to form significant bonds with others; 2) In family systems theory, the reduction of enmeshment by the clarification of diffuse boundaries; 3) A married couple's decision to live their lives in a more separate, disengaged way which may or may not involve legal arrangements and may be a step toward divorce.
question
Sensate Focus
answer
A procedure developed by Masters and Johnson to minimize performance anxiety and spectatoring. A couple may be encouraged to engage in pleasurable body exploration and massage, with each partner giving feedback to the other as to what feels good, but without the expectation of sexual performance or orgasm.
question
Semantics
answer
The study of the way language conveys meaning.
question
Self of the Therapist
answer
The therapist's self-knowledge regarding his/her values, beliefs, biases, strengths, and weaknesses. Also refers to the ways in which therapists make use of their personal experiences during therapy and the nature of the emotional bond offered to clients.
question
Second-Order Cybernetics
answer
A postmodern model that conceives of the therapist and family as one unit. Objectivity is not possible. The treatment unit is a meaning system to which the treating professional is an equal and active contributor. The system does not create a problem; the problem creates a system.
question
Second-Order Change
answer
From the MRI school, a change in the rules that govern the emotions and behavioral patterns of the system, resulting in fundamental system reorganization and permanent changes in interactions. (see First-Order Change).
question
Secondary Reinforcer
answer
From the operant conditioning paradigm, items that have acquired reinforcing properties such as praise, approval, tokens, or money to be exchanged for actual goods (see Primary Reinforcer).
question
Sculpting
answer
A psychodramatic technique used by Duhl, Kantor, Satir, and others. One member, acting as "director," places the family in a tableau or enactment of an event, feeling, or family structure in a therapy session. The process reveals patterns of emotional closeness and distance.
question
Schizophrenogenic Mother
answer
A now-discredited notion by Fromm-Reichmann regarding the origin of schizophrenia, in which she describes a domineering rejecting mother whose behavior was thought to contribute to her child's mental illness.
question
Schedules of Reinforcement
answer
From the operant conditioning paradigm, target behaviors may be reinforced after each occurrence, after a fixed or variable number of occurrences, or after a fixed or variable length of time. Behaviors that are reinforced intermittently and unpredictably are the most resistant to extinction.
question
Scaling Questions
answer
A solution-focused therapy intervention used when presenting problems are vague and goals are difficult to specify. The therapist asks clients to rate on a scale of zero to ten, how they are currently feeling compared to an earlier time. If they report feeling better, the therapist asks them how they achieved the improvement. They might also be asked to rate how confident they are that they will be able to maintain their resolve to change a behavior and to identify what they might do to improve their chances of making progress toward their goals.
question
Sacrifice Intervention
answer
A closing statement in a Milan systemic (early Milan) session that includes a statement of paradox. The person with the symptom is characterized as being in the service of the homeostasis. This intervention tends to overcome resistance by causing a rebellion against the symptom.
question
Rubber Fence
answer
Wynne's term for the type of boundaries around some families that may appear open and flexible, but which in fact permit little information from the outside to penetrate. In these families, rules are in constant flux.
question
Role Function Discrepancies
answer
From Satir, role-inappropriate relationships between the husband and wife who are not only marriage partners, but also form parent/child or sibling/sibling relationships as well (see Model Integration Analysis).
question
Rituals
answer
A Milan systemic intervention consisting of a series of actions that involve the whole family in a sequence of steps forming a "play" to be repeatedly enacted under prescribed circumstances. By engaging family members in a sequence in new ways, it is hoped that they will gain new perceptions which will result in changes in beliefs and behaviors.
question
Ripple Effect
answer
Refers to how a change that occurs at one level of a system results in changes at other levels of the system.
question
Revolving Slate (of Injustice)
answer
From contextual theory, the generational perpetuation of destructive entitlement where one generation damages the next innocent generation. The process is reinforced by earned destructive entitlement and is the chief factor in family and marital dysfunction.
question
Restraining Techniques
answer
From MRI strategic, a paradoxical therapeutic technique used when the family seems ambivalent about changing. The therapist warns the family of the dangers of change, restrains them from trying to change, or asks them to change slowly. Thus, the therapist aligns with the side of the ambivalence that resists change so that the family will align with the side that wishes to change.
question
Relational Ethics
answer
From contextual theory, the fundamental dynamic force that holds families and communities together through reliability and trustworthiness.
question
Rejunctive Moves
answer
From contextual theory, moves toward trustworthy relatedness (see Disjunctive Moves).
question
Rejecting Object
answer
From object relations theory, the rejecting object gives rise to the antilibidinal ego.
question
Rejecting Ego
answer
From object relations theory, one of three parts of the ego, the rejecting unconscious, inflexible, and frustrated by its rejecting object (see Central Ego & Exciting Ego).
question
Relationship Enhancement
answer
A 10-session psychoeducational program for couples emphasizing empathy, genuineness, and positive regard (non-judgmental acceptance). Therapists teach clients to recognize and acknowledge feelings and to express them openly. The program is designed to create a context in which positive changes can occur. The therapist and client share treatment planning and decision-making.
question
Reframing (Relabeling)
answer
From strategic family therapy, techniques in which the therapist's language and how he/she labels events gives new, often positive, meaning to a situation. This alteration of meaning invites the possibility of change, for example, reframing a parent's fusion with a child as "caring too much" rather than dependency or separation anxiety. Relabeling often refers to the alteration of the meaning of a single event, while reframing usually refers to a larger context.
question
Reflexive Questions
answer
From second-order cybernetics, Tomm designed questions that inspire families not only to reflect on the meaning of their current perspectives, but also to consider new options.
question
Reflecting Team
answer
A therapy technique or process involving a team of therapists using a one-way mirror to observe the family and the therapist. The team then discusses the family while being observed by the family and the therapist. The therapist and family then discuss the team's observations.
question
Redundancy (Behavioral Redundancy)
answer
From cybernetics, rule-determined repetitive patterns of interaction.
question
Reciprocity
answer
From behavioral family therapy, the likelihood that the members of a dyad will equitably reinforce one another over time.
question
Reactor
answer
A therapeutic stance in which the therapist would be more likely to respond to others than to direct them (see Conductors).
question
Rational Emotive Family Therapy
answer
From Ellis, a cognitive-behavioral model with the goal of helping family members realize that illogical beliefs and distortions cause their emotional distress (linear causality). They are taught to recognize the problem-causing pattern: A - B - C, in which events in the family (A) are influenced by irrational beliefs (B) and result in a problem (C). The goal is to identify and modify the irrational beliefs.
question
Quid-Pro-Quo Contract
answer
A form of behavioral contingency contract in which one family member agrees to change a behavior or engage in a desired behavior after the other partner in the contract has made a desired change. The behaviors are, thus, mutually positively reinforced (see Parallel Contract).
question
Quantitative Research
answer
A research method that emphasizes experimentation, large samples, data collection, statistical analysis, objectivity, and verification. Quantitative research is typically used to test hypotheses (confirmatory research).
question
Quantitative Analysis
answer
The analysis of the numeric quantity of elements in an interaction.
question
Qualitative Research
answer
A research method that is exploratory, open-ended, and directed more at discovery than at evaluation or justifying a set of hypotheses. Its methods are intended to expand and enhance quantitative research techniques, and to provide a context for better understanding the meaning of the quantitative data. Qualitative research is often used to generate, rather than test, hypotheses (exploratory research).
question
Qualitative Analysis
answer
A descriptive analysis of the elements of an interaction.
question
Punishment
answer
From the operant conditioning paradigm, a process for decreasing an undesirable behavior by applying an aversive stimulus immediately following the target behavior. For example, a teacher reprimands (aversive stimulus) a child when the child throws his sandwich on the floor (target behavior). In response, the child no longer throws food on the floor. Note: the same "apparently" aversive stimulus may be perceived by the organism - in this case the child - as either __________ or reinforcing. If the teacher's reprimand satisfies the child's need for attention and as a result the frequency of the target behavior increases, the interaction can no longer be defined as punishment, but as a negative reinforcement.
question
Punctuation
answer
The process by which one arbitrarily identifies the beginning and the end of a behavioral sequence (linear causality) which instead, in MRI terms, should be seen as part of a circular pattern. Also a communication pattern in which each participant believes that what he/she says or does is caused by the other.
question
Psychology
answer
From contextual theory, what happens within a person such as thoughts, fantasies, emotions, and the meanings that he/she ascribes to the Facts of his/her life.
question
Psychodrama
answer
a A combination of group therapy and theatrical techniques created by Moreno. Participants engage in lively enactments of troubling events, exploring family relations in the process. The goal is for clients and families to experience themselves and their histories in new ways. Many of Moreno's role-playing techniques have been adapted by family therapists.
question
Pseudo Self
answer
From Bowenian theory, a person who is not differentiated may be fused with another person. As a result he/she does not reason from his/her own values, but instead borrows the values of the person with whom he/she is fused and commonly makes emotionally reactive choices.
question
Pseudohostility
answer
Wynne's term to describe the use of chronic conflict to create a somewhat superficial alienation of family members, thereby masking an individual member's need for intimacy and affection.
question
Pseudomutuality
answer
From Wynne, a collusive family maneuver for the purpose of maintaining homeostasis, in which family members present a falsely harmonious picture, masking dysfunction.
question
Proxemics
answer
From communication theory, interpersonal spatial relations, including body language, stance, and preferred physical distance.
question
Projective Identification
answer
An interactive and dysfunctional defense mechanism, defined by the object relations model, in which unwanted characteristics of the self are unconsciously attributed to another person who colludes by behaving as if these projections are true of them. For example, a father has an impulse to engage in deviant or illegal behavior, but the impulse causes him anxiety. He unconsciously projects the impulse onto his son and subtly reinforces his son's acting-out behaviors.
question
Projective Hypothesis
answer
The notion that the information people reveal varies according to the circumstance. For example, the process of constructing a genogram tends to encourage subjective responses that distort the information that is revealed. Therapists should pay attention not only to the information received from the client family, but also to their projections and distortions.
question
Projection
answer
From psychoanalytic and object relations theory, an unconscious which unwanted feelings or beliefs about oneself are split off and then attributed to others.
question
Process
answer
A term used to describe the dynamics of a system, often contrasted with content. For example, in a couple's argument about which movie to see, the content is the activity and choices to be made; whereas, the process includes who initiates the conversation, the interaction between them, the meanings each attaches to the disagreement, and the feelings each has about it.
question
Problem Saturated Stories
answer
From narrative therapy, constructing a story about oneself by emphasizing problematic experiences and ignoring competencies. Individuals and families then function under the influence of such problem filled stories.
question
Problem-Determined System
answer
In collaborative language family therapy, any system in which a problem is so prominent in the family's conversation that few decisions can be made without taking it into account. People who are interested in talking about the problem constitute the problem-determined system.
question
Probing
answer
A structural technique in which the therapist asks questions and/or makes provocative comments designed to evoke responses which help to obtain information about how the family operates. Even failure to obtain the family's cooperation provides information about their boundaries.
question
Privilege
answer
A legal right that state law gives to clients stating that communications between therapist and client are protected by the law from forced disclosure. That is, only the client, not the therapist, has the legal right to disclose communications that take place within such a relationship.
question
Primary Reinforcer
answer
From the operant conditioning paradigm, biologically determined reinforcers such as food and sex.
question
Preventive Intervention and Relationship Enhancement Program - PREPARE
answer
A psychoeducational program for married couples to improve their relationships before problems set in. Participants learn communication and conflict resolution skills and discuss their expectations for marriage. The program can be held weekly for groups of 4 - 10 couples or in a weekend marathon session for 20 - 60 couples.
question
Pretending (Pretend Techniques)
answer
A strategic, paradoxical technique designed by Madanes. Clients are instructed to pretend to have the symptom. By pretending to have the symptom, it becomes voluntary, unreal, and subject to being changed.
question
Prescribing the Symptom
answer
A paradoxical strategic family therapy technique in which the therapist attempts to unbalance the family structure by instructing the members to continue or increase the problem or symptomatic behavior in or to bring the behavior under conscious control or lessen the behavior as the family rebels against the instruction. For example, a client who is unable to complete a work project is encouraged to set times each day in which the project would not be worked on.
question
Premack Principle
answer
From behavioral therapy, a technique in which a high probability behavior i.e., one that the subject would voluntarily tend to engage in frequently, is used to reinforce a low probability target behavior in order to increase the frequency of the target behavior.
question
Postmodernism
answer
A philosophic view held by an eclectic group of family therapy models in which the practitioners consider reality to be subjective, and attend to social and political norms within the client's culture. Constructivist, narrative, and solution-focused are examples of _______________ models.
question
Positive Reinforcement
answer
From operant conditioning, a process for increasing the probability that a desired (target) behavior will be repeated by adding a reinforcing stimulus after the target behavior is exhibited. For example, when a slot machine pays off (reinforcing stimulus), the likelihood of a gambler putting in another quarter (target behavior) increases.
question
Positive Feedback Loop
answer
The flow of information back into the system that works to amplify deviations which increases instability and facilitates change toward meeting new goals. Positive feedback is not homeostatic.
question
Positive Connotation
answer
From the Milan systemic group, a complex paradoxical reframing technique which includes all family members and the system itself. Each family member's contribution to the problem is reframed as an effort to solve problems and help meet the family's needs (see Logical Connotation).
question
Positioning
answer
From MRI strategic therapy, a paradoxical intervention in which the therapist amplifies or exaggerates the family's explanation of the problem to such a point that the family will disagree.
question
Poorly Differentiated
answer
From Bowenian theory, a person with a pseudo-self who is ruleded by emotions. He/she adopts the values and attitudes of significant others in order to be accepted and loved.
question
Placater
answer
From Satir's experiential family therapy, one of five communication styles. The placater attempts to pacify and smooth over conflict by being "nice," defending and covering up for others.
question
Perturbation
answer
An intervention which introduces a small change or ripple without altering the system's basic organization in an attempt to magnify the change later.
question
Person-to-Person Interactions
answer
From Bowenian therapy, interactions that characterize differentiated relationships in which individuals talk rationally to one another without blaming the other and handle conflict without attempting to triangulate a third person.
question
Personal Map
answer
A conception of interpersonal reality that a person uses to make sense of the world.
question
Pattern
answer
A sequence that repeats over time.
question
Parts Party
answer
A therapeutic technique from Satir to help clients experience the different parts of their personalities and enable them to see how they operate as an integrated whole. The family member directs others to act out the specific parts, fostering new personal experience, and insight.
question
Parent Management Training (PMT)
answer
A psychoeducational program in which parents learn behavior management techniques to reduce the prevalence of troublesome behaviors and increase the frequency of more desired behaviors. A goal is to reduce distress and conflict and increase cohesiveness and expressiveness.
question
Parentified Child
answer
From Minuchin's structural model, a role set of behaviors, and placement in a family sequence which stems from the functional removal of a child from the sibling subsystem. A parentified child differs from a child with healthy responsibilities when that child's parental responsibilities are poorly defined and, therefore, unlimited and are beyond the child's developmental capabilities. Such children become symptomatic when they are given responsibilities they cannot handle or are not given the authority to perform a responsibility they are given. For example, a 17 year old girl functions as the family's head when her mother sits uninvolved in the corner of the room.
question
Parentification
answer
From Nagy's contextual model, parentification is the subjective distortion of a relationship that induces one's spouse or child to assume parental responsibilities for that person. These distortions can be achieved either by "wishful fantasy" or by the use of dramatic dependent behavior. Parentification is part of the loyalty system of the family. For example, a parent's fear of seeing blood leads the oldest child to clean other family member's wounds before the phobic parent might see them. According to Nagy, a modest amount of parentification is a necessary part of helping children eventually assume responsible adult roles. But when the parentification of a child is extreme and reinforced by excessive guilt or obligation, as if the parent wouldn't survive, a psychological bind is created, trapping the child. When an adult parentifies another adult, it is usually done through unconscious regressive fantasy.
question
Parallel (or Good Faith) Contract
answer
From behavioral marital therapy, a contract in which the behavior of each partner is not contingent on the other (The husband agrees to take out the garbage even if his wife does not make the bed.)
question
Paralinguistic Communication
answer
From communication theory, communicating through tone, pace, and inflexion.
question
Paradoxical Intervention
answer
A strategic intervention that is built around a statement containing messages at different logical levels which contradict one another. This subtle contradiction is used to perturb the system and to generate change. The symptomatic family member might be asked to keep or intensify his/her depression. If he/she rebels, the symptom must be given up. If he/she complies, the symptom has come under his/her conscious control.
question
Paradigm
answer
An example, model, or concept that contains an interrelated set of assumptions.
question
Ordeal
answer
From strategic family therapy, a directive that is aimed at making the symptom harder to keep than give up. The ordeal requires the family member or members to do something they do not want to do, but is something that would benefit them in some way.
question
Operant Conditioning
answer
A behavioral learning paradigm in which a naturally occurring response is reinforced, increasing the probability that it will be repeated (see Positive Reinforcement, Negative Reinforcement, & Punishment).
question
Open System
answer
From general systems theory, a living system, (including families) with functionally porous or flexible boundaries, permitting the free exchange of information and resources with other systems.
question
Odd Day/Even Day Ritual
answer
From Milan systemic, a technique to encourage irreverence or a more flexible view of the family. The family is given a directive that on odd days one set of opinions would be true, but on even days, false. On the seventh day, the family should act spontaneously.
question
Object Relations Family Therapy
answer
A model developed by Scharff & Scharff; based on principles in object relations theory that emphasize the internalization of experience as the developmental foundation on which humans form relationships and attachments.
question
Object Relations Theory
answer
The theory that people are motivated by a basic need for human connection rather than basic sexual and aggressive drives, and that repeated parent-child interactions, particularly unsatisfying ones, are internalized in the form of objects (see introjects). In development, infants experience and internalize others in a variety of ways (see rejecting object; antilibidinal ego; exciting object; libidinal ego; libidinal system; antilibidinal system; central ego; ideal object; rejecting ego; exciting ego).
question
Nuclear Family Emotional System
answer
From Bowen, a fused family that is unstable and unable to cope with stress. Characterized by conflict and dysfunction which are transmitted across generations.
question
Nuclear Family
answer
Parents and their children living together as a unit.
question
Not Knowing
answer
From collaborative language systems, a stance in which therapists do not use diagnoses, give directives, or make hypotheses. They may offer tentative opinions or ideas, but assert that to take a more "expert" or directive stance would limit the solutions the family and therapist might discover through their conversations. The therapist and client engage in conversation and inquiry as partners. The therapist is not separate from the problem system.
question
Nonsummativity
answer
The concept that specifies that you cannot combine individual elements of a system to recreate its essential character. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
question
Neutrality (Curiosity, Irreverence)
answer
From later Milan systemic, a technique and stance with the family in which the therapist withholds judgment, either positive or negative, in an effort to avoid becoming part of the family's struggles. The therapist is indifferent to treatment outcome, recognizing that his/her role is simply to perturb (or have an impact on) the system.
question
Neurolinguistic Programming (NLP)
answer
NLP practitioners focus on the hidden effects of language, the meaning of non-verbal behavior, and the utilization of communication and trance to create change.
question
Network Therapy
answer
A model associated with Speck, Attneave, and Ruevini in which the treatment includes people from a client's social network (often a large group, including family, friends, neighbors) as well as a team of therapists that come together to solve the client or family problem. Treatment consists of six phases: retribalization, polarization, mobilization, depression, breakthrough, and exhaustion-elation.
question
Network Effect
answer
This is a goal of network therapy. It is a euphoric connectedness to others, likened to the energy and feelings of connectedness that can occur at religious revivals, and rock concerts. The result is to bind the group together into a supportive, purposeful, goal-oriented social network.
question
Narrative Therapy
answer
A postmodern therapeutic model developed by White and Epston, which centers on the narrative metaphor. The family member's sense of reality is organized around the stories (personal narratives) he/she tells about him/herself and the world. Each culture forms dominant narratives, which influence personal narratives, and therapists and clients discuss their impact. Problems, symptoms, and dominant narratives are externalized in the therapy conversations. Narrative therapists encourage their clients to tell "stories" about themselves and respond by exploring alternative perceptions of reality, leading to new options for solutions to problems and in the process, "re-story" their lives. For example, the therapist might explore what the family thinks Depression or The Feminine Ideal have in store for them. In this way, the therapy helps people reexamine their stories and re-story their lives to fit the outcome they prefer.
question
Multigenerational Family Therapy
answer
A diverse grouping of theories and therapy models based on psychodynamic principles developed by Ackerman, Bowen, Nagy, Framo, Paul, and others, which identify family patterns that repeat across generations.
question
Multigenerational
answer
More than one generation of a family
question
Narrative Solutions Approach
answer
The integrated approach of Eron and Lund in which the therapists use MRI reframing techniques, narrative therapy techniques, and elements of solution-focused therapy. The therapist believes that people have a preference for how they would like to view themselves and others, which they call the preferred view. They ask clients questions about their preferred view and about their vision of a future without the problem. Therapists ask mystery questions, such as "How did a person who is so hard-working wind up feeling listless and depressed?"
question
Negentropy
answer
From general systems theory, the measure of organization in a system. A well-organized system would have high levels of negentropy.
question
Negative Reinforcement
answer
From the operant conditioning paradigm, a procedure for strengthening a behavior, i.e., increasing the probability that the behavior will be repeated or increasing its frequency. A stimulus, often aversive, is removed once a target behavior is exhibited. For example, a mother has been nagging a child to clean up her room. If the nagging stops (stimulus behavior is removed) when the child picks up her room (target behavior), it is likely that the child will pick up her room again.
question
Negative Feedback Loops
answer
Corrective information that flows back into the family system which serves to minimize deviation, keep the system functioning within prescribed limits, and discourage change. Negative feedback is homeostatic.
question
Multiple Family Therapy
answer
Therapy with several families with similar problems.
question
Multi-Partiality (Plurality)
answer
From social constructivist, Hoffman, the therapist's stance in which he/she strives to positively regard each person's point of view, even ones that are repugnant to the therapist or to society, in order to find the meaning behind behaviors, actions, and events.
question
Multigenerational Transmission Process
answer
In Bowenian family therapy, the process by which roles, patterns, emotional reactivity, and family structure are passed from one generation to another. Poorly differentiated individuals tend to marry one another and over several generations produce offspring who are increasingly less differentiated and as a result suffer from severe mental disorders including schizophrenia.
question
Multidirectional Partiality
answer
From Nagy's contextual family therapy, the clinical stance of the therapist in which the therapist is accountable to, and supportive of, every relevant member, even when it necessitates accepting contradictory positions within a conflict. The therapist strives for neutrality, joins with each family member, and keeps communication open with all members.
question
Multi-Conductor Model
answer
From network therapy, multiple therapists who share the group leadership as a team.
question
MRI/ Mental Research Institute
answer
A center for the study of families in Palo Alto, CA whose researchers and practitioners - Bateson, Satir, and Haley - studied schizophrenia and family interactions, communication, and cybernetic theory. They emphasized process and interactional sequences rather than structure, and distinguished between first-order change and second-order change. They developed a version of brief family therapy based on the notion that the "problem" or treatment focus, stems from the failed solution previously attempted by the family. Later MRI practitioners include Watzlawick, Weakland, and Fisch.
question
Morphostasis
answer
A system's tendency to maintain its basic organization and structure.
question
Morphogenesis
answer
A system's tendency to change its basic organization or structure.
question
Modernism
answer
From philosophy, a position in which "truth" consists of a tangible, knowable set of observable or deducible facts. In this philosophy it is assumed that there are universal principles that would guide researchers and therapists toward theoretic tenets, diagnoses, and treatment (see Postmodernism).
question
Model Integration Analysis
answer
From Satir, the child's method for making sense of his/her parents' differences and selecting those aspects of parental male/female role models that become a blueprint for his/her behavior and expectations in other relationships. As marital partners, individuals project onto their spouses an image of how they expect them to be, rather than how they are. Inevitably, each is disappointed. In treatment, Satir refers to the assessment of these images as Model Integration Analysis (see Role Function Discrepancies).
question
Modeling
answer
From social learning theory, learning new behavior or extinguishing old behavior by observing the reinforcement contingencies of the behavior in another person.
question
Miracle Question
answer
A solution-focused technique used to clarify goals. Clients are asked, "Suppose one night, while you were asleep, there was a miracle and this problem was solved. How would you know? What would be different when you wake up?"
question
Mimesis
answer
A joining technique used primarily by structural therapists in which the therapist gains acceptance by mimicking the gestures, communication, and behavioral patterns of family members.
question
Milan Systemic Family Therapy
answer
A theory and therapeutic model influenced by Bateson and the MRI Group, originally developed in Italy by Selvini Palazzoli, Boscolo, Cecchin, and Prata. The primary techniques associated with the early Milan group were rituals and positive connotations. The Milan Group split in the early 1980s with Selvini Palazzoli and Prata forming one group, adhering to the strategic model and developing a ritualistic technique, invariant prescription, to counteract the dirty game, or power struggle between the parents and their child. Boscolo and Cecchin moved away from the strategic approach, developing a collaborative style of therapy. In this model, problems are maintained when the family holds to an old epistemology that does not fit its current circumstance. The therapist introduces new information indirectly by asking questions and the family solves problems themselves as they develop a new epistemology. The therapist/client interactions within the session are the treatment. In their interviews they displayed a curious attitude about the family and the meanings they derived from their experiences and interchanges.
question
Metaphor
answer
A symbolic representation of an experience that captures both its basic and essential features by using a description of a completely different category of objects or events. Often used to shift a family's perspective.
question
Metaframeworks Model
answer
A conceptually wide-ranging integrative model that addresses six core domains of human experience: organization, sequences, development, culture, gender, and internal processes. Each person and family has the capacity to interact positively and harmoniously unless they are being constrained. The therapist considers the contributions of gender, ethnicity, class, religion, education, or regional background in the development of constraints. The goal is to release constraints, not to focus on deficits.
question
Metacommunication
answer
Communication messages, usually nonverbal, that qualify or clarify another communication (communication about communication). The nonverbal message may be congruent with the message (A pat on the back that accompanies, "Job well done, son.") or incongruent ("Nothing's wrong," said through clenched teeth.) With incongruent metacommunication, usually the nonverbal message settles the discrepancy.
question
Merit
answer
Merit From contextual theory, what is earned through the accumulation of care and concern toward others.
question
Medical Family Therapy
answer
A psychoeducational model in which clients with medical problems and their families are treated by a team including physicians, allied health care professionals, and mental health professionals.
question
Marriage Encounter
answer
A psychoeducational weekend couple's retreat for improved communication, problem solving, sexual intimacy, and spiritual health. Originally for Catholic married couples and later adapted for Protestant and Jewish couples.
question
Marital Skew
answer
From Lidz, a dysfunctional marriage in which one partner is dominant and the other submissive. The couple presents the situation as "normal," leading to a distortion of reality by family members in order to maintain the marriage.
question
Marital Schism
answer
From Lidz, a dysfunctional marriage in which each partner is centered on him/herself, undermines the other, and makes frequent threats of divorce.
question
Mapping the Relative Influence
answer
From narrative therapy, the therapeutic technique of asking about the effect of the problem on relationships and the effect of the relationships on the problem. As family members identify their influence on the problem a second, alternative description of the problem is generated. This alternative description, in turn, is a source for new responses.
question
Marital Adjustment Scale
answer
An assessment inventory used to determine the relative strengths and weaknesses of a marriage, e.g., communications skills, the manner and availability of rewards versus punishments, and sexual satisfaction.
question
Mapping the System
answer
(See Family Mapping) A structural family therapy assessment tool (structural map) used to depict a family's organization and gain an understanding of its complex structures and sequences (e.g., triangles, coalitions, emotional cut-offs).
question
MANOVA — Multiple Analysis of Variance
answer
A method of statistical analysis used by researchers for determining which independent variables have a causal relationship with the dependent variable (see ANOVA).
question
Managed Care
answer
A service delivery system in which the third-party payer controls the cost, quality, quantity, and terms of treatment.
question
Make Believe Play
answer
From Madanes, a therapeutic technique in which parents are asked to make-believe they need the child's help and the child is to make-believe helping them. Since the parents explicitly ask for help and the child overtly helps them, there is no need for the covert symptomatic behavior. Additionally, when parents are put in this inferior position overtly, they may feel at odds with what is appropriate and reassert a superior position.
question
Loyalty
answer
A central concept in contextual theory, the internalized set of expectations, injunctions, and obligations deriving from interactions with one's family of origin.
question
Love Days
answer
From behavioral marital therapy, on specific days one partner non-contingently increases those behaviors the other partner finds pleasurable (see Caring Days).
question
Longitudinal Studies
answer
A research design in which subjects are followed across time, which often allows for greater certainty in causal inference than Cross-Sectional Studies.
question
Logical Connotation
answer
A development in the Milan systemic model that grew as the use of paradox declined. The therapist communicates that the development of a symptom is understandable, given the context. There is no implication that a problem is useful, beneficent, or functional (Positive Connotation), only that people have gotten used to it and that habits are hard to change.
question
Linear Causality
answer
An assumption of cause and effect in which one event is thought to cause the next. For example, in a classical conditioning paradigm, a particular stimulus elicits a specific response (see Circularity).
question
Libidinal System
answer
From object relations theory, a repressed system within the ego characterized by need, excitement, and longing.
question
Libidinal Ego
answer
From object relations theory, an exciting (or overstimulating) object gives rise to the libidinal ego.
question
Levels of Intervention
answer
Targeting interventions at a specific family subsystem, such as the children or parents.
question
Leveler
answer
From Satir's experiential family therapy, one of five communications styles. The leveler reacts appropriately to the situation in a flowing and authentic manner.
question
Ledger
answer
From contextual theory, an internal system in which the relative balance of debts and entitlements is kept. Ideally, there should be a balance between the repayment of the person's debt to the family of origin and self-fulfillment.
question
Leagues
answer
(Communities of Concern) From narrative therapy, groups of clients who are working on similar problems meet in order to continue to construct and maintain new narratives and to support each other's preferred outcomes.
question
Landscape of Meaning Questions
answer
From narrative therapy, questions to help clients consider a new, more heroic self view.
question
Landscape of Action Questions
answer
From narrative therapy, questions the therapist asks to gather information about the times in clients' lives that they were able to resist the effects of the problem.
question
Kinesthetic communication
answer
From communication theory, communication through body motion.
question
Joining
answer
A structural family therapy engagement technique in which the therapist accepts and accommodates to the family and engages with each family member. The goal of joining is to establish a trusting and familiar connection with the family so that the therapist can effect changes from within the system.
question
Isomorphism
answer
A phenomena in which two or more systems or subsystems exhibit similar or parallel characteristics, especially in supervision when roles and interactions between therapist and supervisor mimic those of the family being discussed. For example, a therapist seeing a family that rejects all suggestions for change becomes similarly rejecting of his/her supervisor's suggestions.
question
I-Position
answer
From Bowenian therapy, statements that reflect the speaker's own thoughts and feelings, instead of attempting to blame others.
question
Invisible Loyalties
answer
From Nagy's contextual therapy, unconscious obligations that children take on in order to help their families, sacrificing their own interests and well being in the process.
question
Invariant Prescription
answer
Created by the Milan systemic group, this unchanging prescription, given to all families with symptomatic children, requests that parents spend time together away from the children and is intended to break the pattern of destructive "games" and create clearer generational boundaries.
question
Introjection
answer
A process of normal development in which parts of caretakers are split off and internalized into the child's developing personality. Expectations of self and other are based on these internal representations.
question
Introjects
answer
A hypothetical construct from object relations theory referring to the internalized images and memories from past relationships, particularly parents, who continue to exert an influence on current thoughts, feelings, and/or behaviors.
question
Intervention, The
answer
A therapeutic process used to confront a substance abuser's denial of his/her substance abuse. Friends and family members organize a confrontation meeting, led by the therapist, in which they each proclaim their commitment to, and concern for, the alcoholic. The goals are to have the substance abuser feel supported, acknowledge the problems the abuse is causing, and enter a treatment program.
question
Intervention
answer
In general a maneuver on the part of the therapist to test a hypothesis and/or promote change.
question
Interpretations
answer
One of the primary therapeutic techniques of the psychoanalytic and object relations models in which the therapist makes clarifying statements regarding clients' unconscious motives and processes in order to help them understand the significance of the material uncovered. The purpose of _________________________ is Insight & Working Through.
question
Internal Family Systems (IFS)
answer
An integrated, collaborative family or individual therapy model created by Richard Schwartz, applying systems concepts and techniques (Gestalt, structural, strategic, experiential) to intrapsychic processes. Therapists and clients co-create changes in life stories. The goal of individual therapy is to help the client differentiate his/her core Self and heal the parts. In family therapy the goal is to elicit the family members' Selves and collaboratively deal with the parts of each that are involved in the problem. Family members can then have Self-to-Self interactions and begin to see one another as people who have a problem with some of their parts rather than being defined by the symptom.
question
Intensity
answer
A structural family therapeutic stance and technique in which the therapist regulates the degree of impact of his/her messages. Intensity can be regulated, for example, by increasing the length of a transaction or repeating the message. Tone, pacing and volume are the tools of intensity.
question
Integrative Problem-Centered Therapy (IPCT)
answer
A model developed by Pinsof in which various family and individual approaches are used in sequence, progressing from the simplest here-and-now interventions from structural, strategic, cognitive-behavioral, solution-focused models or pharmacological agents. If those interventions are unsuccessful, the therapist moves deeper into intergenerational issues or object relations. The therapy may use a team approach, bringing in experts in the various techniques or assigning family members individual therapists.
question
Integrative Problem-Centered Therapy (IPCT)
answer
A model developed by Pinsof in which various family and individual approaches are used in sequence, progressing from the simplest here-and-now interventions from structural, strategic, cognitive-behavioral, solution-focused models or pharmacological agents. If those interventions are unsuccessful, the therapist moves deeper into intergenerational issues or object relations. The therapy may use a team approach, bringing in experts in the various techniques or assigning family members individual therapists.
question
Integrative Couples Therapy
answer
An integrated approach using support and empathy to help couples accept differences and disappointments and break the cycle of mutual blame. Treatment begins with a formulation consisting of: a theme that defines the conflict and a polarization process describing the dysfunctional pattern of interaction. The problem is externalized and the couple unites against a common enemy. The couple uses behavioral exchange processes such as quid pro quo and good faith contracts, but is also taught to make I-statements, to listen, and to express themselves in direct but non-blaming ways.
question
Intergenerational Loyalties
answer
In contextual family therapy, the set of emotional obligations to one's family of origin as well as to one's spouse and children.
question
Interface (Boundary Interface)
answer
Points at which the boundary from one system or subsystem meets the boundaries of other subsystems or the environment.
question
Interactional Insight
answer
A goal of symbolic-experiential therapy occurring as a result of expanded emotional interactions within the session resulting in less inhibition. Insight can be a by-product of change, but is not a curative factor.
question
Insight
answer
A goal of psychodynamic therapy, to have clients gain an understanding of the underlying, unconscious dynamic issues that affect their relationships.
question
Initial Interview
answer
A therapy format associated with Haley in which the therapist conducts a structured interview consisting of four stages: social stage, problem stage, interactional stage, and goal setting stage.
question
Informed Consent
answer
The legal right of clients or research subjects to be told of the purpose and risks prior to agreeing to participate.
question
Individuation
answer
The selecting and accentuating of certain experiences and aspects of the self in the process of becoming a unique human being, includes separating from the larger group or system.
question
Incongruous Hierarchy
answer
Incongruous Hierarchy From Madanes, a dysfunctional structure in which children use symptoms to try to change their parents.
question
Inconsistency
answer
From symbolic-experiential therapy, an attitude by therapists in which they do not delude themselves into believing that they are consistent with families. They accept inconsistency, and realize that it helps undermine the family's attempt to maintain a rigid pattern of living.
question
Identified Patient (IP)
answer
The family member who manifests the symptoms.
question
Ideal Object
answer
From object relations theory, a neutral object freed from exciting and rejecting aspects. Maintained by the Central Ego.
question
Hypothesizing
answer
A technique used by Milan systemic therapists. A trial and error process by which the therapist makes initial suppositions about the presenting problem, then tests the supposition by asking questions or making an intervention based on that hypothesis. The original supposition is then revised according to the new information. This cybernetic process makes use of information resulting from completed feedback loops.
question
Hypothesis
answer
In research, a proposed causal explanation that can be tested and supported or disproved.
question
Human Validation Process Model
answer
An experiential model developed by Satir, in which the therapist and family work together to promote open communication and authentic emotional experiences.
question
Humanistic
answer
The therapeutic stance that emphasizes the uniqueness of individuals and promotes their potential for growth.
question
Human Immuno-Suppresant Virus (HIV)
answer
The virus that causes AIDS. The virus can be detected in the blood of infected individuals. HIV+ is the designation of sero-conversion, indicating that the individual carries the virus. HIV- is used to designate that the test does not reveal the presence of the virus (see AIDS).
question
Homophobia
answer
An irrational dislike, disregard, or fear of homosexual people.
question
Homeostasis
answer
The tendency of a system to strive for balance in order to achieve stability and limit the range of behavioral variability.
question
HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act)
answer
A law passed in 1996 which is also sometimes called the "Kassebaum-Kennedy" law. This law expands your health care coverage if you have lost your job, or if you move from one job to another, HIPAA protects you and your family if you have: pre-existing medical conditions, and/or problems getting health coverage, and you think it is based on past or present health. (see http://www.cms.hhs.gov/apps/glossary/ )
question
Highly Differentiated
answer
From Bowenian theory, a person who is able to react to the world rationally and enter into relationships while balancing competing needs for belonging and individuality.
question
Hierarchy
answer
The control and decision-making structure of a family, which may be based on age, gender, roles, or education. In structural and strategic family therapy, disordered ________________ result in dysfunction.
question
Health Care Clearinghouse
answer
A public or private entity, such as a billing service, that: (1) translates information received from another entity in a non-standard format or containing non-standard data into standard data elements or a standard transaction; and (2) receives a standard transaction from anotherentity and translates it into nonstandard format ornonstandard data content for a receiving entity.
question
Haptic (or symbolic) Communication
answer
From communication theory, communication through touch.
question
Grief
answer
The range of emotions following a loss, which are part of the process of integrating the loss.
question
Global Assessment of Relational Functioning (GARF)
answer
An assessment tool used to rate family functioning along a continuum in three areas: problem solving (decision making and communication); organization (roles and boundaries); and emotional climate (empathy, respect, regard). Originally designed by family therapist Lyman Wynne, the GARF is included as an appendix in the DSM-IV.
question
Gestalt Family Therapy
answer
A model of therapy that focuses on the anxiety inherent in the contact between people and which uses techniques to heighten self-awareness and personal choice.
question
Genogram
answer
A multigenerational schematic diagram of the family system used by Bowenian and other transgenerational therapists to depict individual and relationship characteristics and behavioral patterns.
question
General Systems Theory
answer
The study of how living systems organize, maintain, and regulate themselves, emphasizing the unity and interrelated hierarchical structure of the parts. Adapted from the biological, physical, and communication sciences, primarily through the work of von Bertalanffy.
question
Gender-Sensitive Family Therapy
answer
A philosophical position that can be applied to any model of family therapy in which the therapist examines the impact of gender roles on family members in order to help clients make choices that are not limited by internalized gender biases or external pressure based on gender.
question
Gender and Violence Project
answer
A project at the Ackerman Institute started during the mid-1980s, the goal of which was to describe the relationship between gender and violence using both the feminist and systemic perspectives. An important question considered was whether family therapy could be successful in cases of domestic violence.
question
GAP Report
answer
In 1970 the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry (GAP) published a report with a primary finding that demonstrated that the majority of therapists who worked with families identified improved communication as their primary treatment goal.
question
Fusion
answer
From Bowen, ________ refers to the blurring of intellectual and emotional features or boundaries between family members. The opposite of differentiation, it results in a lack of a separate self and high levels of reactivity among family members.
question
Functional Family Therapy (Originally Systems Behavioral Therapy)
answer
A model of cognitive-behavioral marital therapy developed by Alexander which integrates systems theory, behaviorism, and cognitive therapy. The two-step therapy includes cognitive work and psychoeducation and is most often applied to adolescents and their families.
question
Functional Analysis
answer
A behavioral assessment technique used to determine the interpersonal or environmental contingencies that maintain the problem.
question
Functional
answer
The ability of a system or subsystem to achieve its goals.
question
Formula First Task
answer
The first intervention of solution-focused treatment in which clients are asked to observe their lives between the first and second session to notice what has happened that they would like to continue to have happen so that they begin to identify their strengths.
question
Fixed Linguistic Statement
answer
From solution-focused therapy, the idea that when families begin treatment they often characterize the problem as though it were an immutable fact, generating a sense of hopelessness. To reverse this tendency, the therapist begins by eliciting information about what happens when the problem does not occur.
question
Fixation of Triangles
answer
A term used by Whitaker (symbolic-experiential therapy) to describe a clash of family of origin cultures (a man from a family of isolates marries into a family of social activists). The weakest family member is vulnerable to pathology arising out of family mythology.
question
First-Order Change
answer
From the MRI school, adaptations and changes in families which may change behavior, but do not affect the system's organization. For example, an adolescent begins maintaining his/her curfew as a result of being grounded for breaking curfew (see Second-Order Change).
question
Filial Loyalty
answer
From contextual theory, the loyalty inherent in children toward parents. The care and concern given to children, in turn, results in Filial Responsibility toward parents (see Split Filial Loyalty).
question
Field Theory
answer
From Lewin, the theory that the individual's field or "life-space" is psychologically and emotionally constructed of objects which are perceived to have either positive or negative valence. Positively valued objects are approached, while negatively valued ones are avoided. Closely related to Gestalt psychology in its interest in how attention to objects is determined.
question
Feminist Family Therapy
answer
A treatment philosophy with a nonsexist, egalitarian view in which the social and familial gender roles of women and men are actively considered, including the perspective that social and cultural structures often give men a greater amount of power and control over political and economic resources.
question
Feedback Loops
answer
A circular mechanism whereby feedback is reintroduced into the system, in a looping chain of events that influence one another (see Negative Feedback Loops & Positive Feedback Loops).
question
Feedback
answer
Information which is returned to the system and which exerts a controlling influence on it.
question
Family Typologies
answer
A way of classifying families which illustrates members' similarities and differences, and which may quickly enable the therapist to identify therapeutic goals. For example, the Beavers-Timberlawn model classifies families as centripetal or centrifugal.
question
Family Systems Theory
answer
A broad range of theories and therapeutic models that view the family as an open system that functions in relation to its larger environment and define individual problems in the context of family dynamics.
question
Family Rules
answer
From strategic family therapy, rules that govern family members' behavior or promote specific reactions (see First- & Second-Order Change).
question
Family Projection Process
answer
In Bowenian family therapy, the lack of differentiation in parents often results in one of the parents becoming dysfunctional, immature, and fused with one of the children. Conflict in the parental sub-unit is avoided, but the child's emotional growth is sacrificed. In this manner symptoms and a lack of differentiation is transmitted from parents to children.
question
Family of Origin
answer
The family into which the person is born or adopted, used most extensively by transgenerational models.
question
Family Life Cycle
answer
The series of sequential developmental periods that occur over the course of a family's lifespan, each with transition points and specific tasks that need to be negotiated for healthy development: marriage, child rearing, launching of adolescents, aging, and death. Normal functioning requires adapting to the changes of each stage. Families are vulnerable to developing problems during transitions.
question
Family Group Therapy
answer
A model of early family therapy created by Bell in which the therapist stimulates open discussions, leaving the family to solve its own problems. Like other groups, Bell found that families in therapy proceed through stages, and he structured his work to concentrate on those stages.
question
Family Emotional System
answer
In Bowenian Family Therapy, the recurrent pattern of emotional reactivity linking family members.
question
Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales - FACES
answer
The designed by Olson and others. A questionnaire designed to measure a family's qualities, including cohesion and adaptability (see Circumplex Model).
question
Facts
answer
From contextual theory, the attributes that people are born with (gender, ethnicity, birth defects) and their life experiences (parental divorce, abuse).
question
Extinction
answer
From operant conditioning paradigm, when a previously learned and reinforced behavior is no longer reinforced it eventually disappears.
question
Expressed Emotion (EE)
answer
The degree of emotion expressed by family members. It has been observed that families with a schizophrenic member tend to have a high degree of intense and negative emotional interactions.
question
Externalizing the Problem
answer
A narrative therapy technique described by White, in which a problem or symptom is conceptualized and discussed as though it originated outside the family or person. The problem is personified, and its powers and designs for the person or family are explored. For example, therapists might then ask questions about the problem, such as, "When did Schizophrenia come in to your family, and what do you think its plans are for your future?"
question
Experiential Family Therapy
answer
A group of therapy models, developed principally by Satir (human validation process model) and Whitaker (symbolic-experiential), that have in common certain tenets such as: experience is more important than intellectual thought; the importance of experiencing a full range of affect; the stance of the therapist as a real person; the importance of spontaneity and creativity; the belief in the freedom of choice; the focus on the here-and-now; the belief in the inherent ability of families to heal themselves; and the description of general rather than specific therapy goals.
question
Exoneration
answer
From contextual therapy, the goal of treatment in which the therapist attempts to help the client see the positive intent and intergenerational loyalty issues behind even the destructive behaviors of previous generations. Also thought of as forgiveness based upon understanding the past. If the behavior can be seen in a human context, the hold of the past is loosened.
question
Existential Encounters
answer
The therapeutic stance of Whitaker's symbolic-experiential therapy in which the therapist is willing both to receive the family members' reactions to him/her and to fully disclose his/her reactions to them.
question
Exciting Object
answer
From object relations theory, the exciting (or overstimulating) object gives rise to the libidinal ego.
question
Exciting Ego
answer
From object relations theory, one of three parts of the ego. It is unconscious, inflexible, and in a state of longing for a tempting but unsatisfying object (see Central Ego & Rejecting Ego).
question
Exception Question
answer
A solution-focused technique used to offset family members' tendency to focus on what is wrong in their lives. Therapists ask clients to recall the times when they did not have the problem when they ordinarily would or times they had the problem, but solved it.
question
Ethnicity
answer
Ethnic origin of a family which incorporates a value system, conscious and unconscious processes, and from which members often derive a sense of identity and belonging.
question
Ethics
answer
A set of commonly agreed upon rules and standards for proper professional conduct. Distinguished from law in which a governmental body legislates criteria for professional behavior, the violation of which may result in criminal or financial penalties.
question
Equitable Asymmetry
answer
From contextual theory, the unequal, but healthy, degree of care and consideration given by parents toward children.
question
Equifinality
answer
A cybernetic principle, which states that a similar outcome may result from many different initial events. For example, depression may be caused either by biochemical imbalances or traumatic life experiences.
question
Epistemology
answer
The study or theory of the nature, sources, and limits of knowledge. Used by family therapists to describe how and what family members come to believe.
question
Entropy
answer
From general systems theory, the measure of disorder in a system that occurs without imposed controls and inputs. A family functioning randomly might be considered highly entropic.
question
Entitlements
answer
From contextual theory, what each person is inherently and fairly due and what each accrues based on his/her behavior toward others and other's behavior toward him/her.
question
Enmeshment
answer
In structural family therapy, a loss of autonomy due to diffuse boundaries, resulting in family members being overly involved in one another's emotional lives.
question
Enactment
answer
A structural therapy technique used both in the assessment and treatment of families. Members are instructed to demonstrate their problem during the therapy session, allowing the therapist to observe the problem and develop strategies to change it.
question
Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy
answer
An experiential/humanistic couples therapy model from Greenberg and Johnson which posits that problems often stem from an attempt to hide primary emotions such as fear and need for attachment and instead use defensive and coercive reactions known as secondary reactive emotions. The relationship is characterized by negative interactions such as pursuer/distancer or blame. The negative interactions lead to greater suspicion, more fear, and more negative reactions. In therapy the couple accesses the primary emotions so that they are able to reframe their relationship and alter their negative interactions and simultaneously strengthen their emotional bond.
question
Emotional Divorce
answer
From Bowen's family therapy, the cool distance between the parents whose relationships vacillated between overcloseness and overdistance.
question
Emotional Cut-off
answer
In the transgenerational models, emotional and/or physical distancing from family relationships or a denial of their importance in order to avoid the pain of unresolved emotional conflicts, anxiety, and lack of differentiation. Often falsely perceived as the solution to a problem.
question
Emergents
answer
From general systems theory, distinct entities of the whole family or group, not present in the parts.
question
Egosyntonic
answer
Phenomena or experiences consistent with the perceived needs, self-perception, or ideals of an individual.
question
Egodystonic
answer
Phenomena or experiences at odds with an individual's self-perception.
question
Ego
answer
An analytic concept referring to a hypothetical internal mental structure that both contains the individual's perception of him/herself and is also the rational mediator between the instinctual demands of the id and the internalized social prohibitions of the super-ego.
question
Ecosystemic Approach
answer
The therapeutic view that it is important to attend to the family's relationship to the larger systems - community, school, and work.
question
Dysfunctional Hierarchy
answer
From Haley's strategic model, the primary focus of treatment. Family decision-making structures that do not allow the family to accomplish goals and meet the needs of family members, for example, parents who have abdicated their executive function to their children.
question
Dysfunction
answer
A breakdown in the ability of a structure to achieve its goals.
question
Dyad
answer
A temporary or permanent connection between two persons.
question
Dramatizations
answer
From Madanes, a therapeutic technique in which a parent is directed to request that the child intentionally perform the problem behavior. In this way the symptom will not draw as much parental attention, and if it no longer serves a purpose, it can be dropped.
question
Double Bind
answer
A six-step concept described by Bateson in which an individual receives contradictory commands within an important emotional relationship. The recipient of the information can neither comment nor escape, a "damned if you do, damned if you don't" situation. Researchers originally hypothesized that the double bind was a disordered family communication style that led to the development of schizophrenic symptoms.
question
Double ABC-X Family Stress Model
answer
The extension of Hill's early work on stress by McCubbin and Patterson which considers the cumulative effect of stress on families rather than the impact of a single stressor (see ABC-X Family Crisis Model).
question
Dominant Cultural Discourses
answer
From narrative therapy, sociocultural norms that can become internalized and have a controlling effect on one's story of oneself. In treatment these norms are personified (e.g., "Expectations for Men, Women, or African-Americans") and their impact is discussed.
question
Distancing
answer
From structural family therapy, the process of creating emotional space, often in response to enmeshment due to diffuse boundaries. For example, adolescents may ______________ themselves as a way of solidifying an identity.
question
Displacement Story
answer
From Guerin a follower of Bowen, a technique to help family members gain emotional distance from their problems and to become more self-reflective and less blaming. Rather than have a couple discuss their specific problems, the therapist might discuss another couple with similar problems or use films to illustrate an issue.
question
Disjunctive Moves
answer
From contextual theory, moves away from trustworthy relatedness.
question
Disengagement
answer
From structural family therapy, emotionally distant and uninvolved family members with overly rigid boundaries in which members are isolated and disconnected from one another.
question
Discriminative Stimulus
answer
From the operant conditioning paradigm, a cue that signals the availability of a reinforcer.
question
Discontinuous Change
answer
Sudden, unanticipated change in family organization usually brought on by a crisis (may be therapeutically induced), which causes a change in perception, beliefs, or perspective. The opposite of continuous change which is gradual, evolutionary, or developmental.
question
Dirty Middle (The)
answer
From Framo's couples therapy, an impasse in treatment when couples have gained some insight about the nature of the problems and the irrationality of their demands on one another, but they still have differences as to what each want from one another and from the marriage.
question
Dirty Games
answer
From Milan systemic family therapy, the unacknowledged power struggle between parents and the symptomatic child.
question
Directive
answer
An intervention developed primarily by Haley and Madanes in which the therapist gives the family a task with the intent of changing stuck sequences. There are two types of directives: straightforward and indirect. Straightforward directives are not paradoxical, and the therapist expects the family to carry out the task as given (parents are asked to take control of their misbehaving child). Indirect directives are paradoxical and the therapist expects the family to resist the task (the parents are asked to act as if it were impossible to take control of their child). With all directives, the process of negotiating relationships and behavior is more important than whether they are carried out.
question
Directed Masturbation Training
answer
From sex therapist, LoPiccolo, a method of treating primary inorgasmic or preorgasmic dysfunction. The woman is taught to become familiar, more comfortable with, and more accepting of her body and her sexuality. She is encouraged to explore her genitals for tactile quality then for pleasure; to use erotic materials and fantasy; to use orgasm "triggers;" and, if necessary to use a vibrator. The woman then teaches her partner (Partner Training) about the kinds of stimulation that she finds pleasurable. Throughout the program, the woman is instructed to do Kegel exercises, which are thought to increase orgasmic potential. The couples is also instructed to engage in a variety of mutually pleasurable, non-demanding and initially non-genital, sexual experiences.
question
Diffuse Boundaries
answer
In structural family therapy, boundaries that are not clearly defined or maintained, resulting in blurred generational roles and responsibilities. ________________ boundaries often lead to enmeshed relationships.
question
Differentiation of Self Scale
answer
A scale, developed by Bowen, to measure the degree of emotional fusion with others. The scale ranges from 0, or no self, to 100, a hypothetical ideal of fully differentiated.
question
Differentiation of Self
answer
In Bowenian family therapy, the separation of intellectual and emotional functioning, which results in being less reactive to family system dynamics and other members' emotional states.
question
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM - IV)
answer
The most recent edition of the diagnostic manual of the American Psychiatric Association, which provides a classification system of mental disorders and syndromes.
question
Detouring
answer
From structural family therapy, when two family members attempt to preserve their relationship by defining their conflict as a disagreement about a third person, keeping the focus on that person rather than themselves and their problem.
question
Destructive Entitlement
answer
From Nagy's contextual family therapy, the development of symptomatic behaviors in the pursuit of self-justifying and harmful means to satisfy the perception of what is due as a result of deficient caring and responsibility in parenting. For example, a child who was forced into the role of "adult" by his/her parents may feel entitled to engage in irresponsible, adolescent behaviors as an adult (see Revolving Slate of Injustice).
question
Detriangle
answer
The Bowenian concept of withdrawing from an existing triangle so that the person is not drawn into the conflict between the other two, often the parents.
question
Defense Mechanism
answer
An analytic concept describing the unconscious process by which the ego protects the person from conscious awareness of anxiety provoking, threatening thoughts and memories.
question
Deconstruction
answer
The postmodern process of constructing new meanings by examining implicit assumptions.
question
De-catastrophizing
answer
A behavioral technique in which the therapist teaches the client to challenge his/her tendency to have catastrophic expectations.
question
Cybernetics
answer
The study of how systems are controlled by information and feedback loops and the means by which they work (see Second-Order Cybernetics).
question
Customer
answer
From solution-focused therapy one of three ways to characterize the level of participation and commitment to change. This client brings a problem and a willingness to work toward its resolution.
question
Cultural Consciousness (Cultural Sensitivity)
answer
Therapists' sensitivity to the existence and impact of the family's cultural rules and values. Such awareness enables easier engagement, reduces misunderstanding and misinterpretation of family members' behavior, and facilitates the development of trust. Therapists should be aware of their biases regarding the cultural background of others and their own.
question
Culture
answer
The set of shared beliefs, behaviors, values, customs, meanings, symbols, and the like, transferred from one generation to the next and from the social groups to which the person belongs (Italian, Jewish, Lesbian, etc.).
question
Cross-Sectional Studies
answer
A research design which examines subjects at a single point in time (see Longitudinal Studies).
question
Cross Generational Coalition
answer
From structural therapy, a stable coalition between a parent and child against the other patent.
question
Crisis of Accession - Crisis of Dismemberment
answer
From Hoffman, discontinuous changes in families, like symptom development, often occur at times of stress. Changes in the family composition are particularly demanding. There are crises of accession when someone joins the family (marriage, birth) and crises of dismemberment when members leave (divorce, death).
question
Craziness
answer
From Whitaker's symbolic-experiential family therapy, a concept in which healthy functioning for both therapists and families includes a high proportion of non-rational, creative, right-brain activity. Therapists need to be able to be irreverent, to use fantasy freely, to function at a regressed level when it serves the therapy, and to be mature enough to be immature (see Inconsistency).
question
Countertransference
answer
A concept from analytic theory that relates to the therapist's unconscious emotional reactions to the client which derive from the therapist's own history.
question
Co-therapy
answer
A technique, introduced by Whitaker, in which two therapists work together as a team.
question
Contingency Contract
answer
In the behavioral family therapy model, an agreement between two or more family members aimed at increasing mutually rewarding behaviors. The contract, which is usually written, specifies the desired behaviors each will do and under what circumstances.
question
Contextual Family Therapy
answer
A theory and therapeutic model developed by Boszormenyi-Nagy based on the ethical dimension of family relationships. The family maintains invisible, intergenerational loyalties, which members hold in their personal ledgers. Problems in relationships are thought to result either from an attempt to maintain or change the balance sheet of what members owe to one another.
question
Content
answer
A term that describes the topics that people in therapy are discussing (see Process).
question
Constructivist Family Therapy
answer
A variety of therapeutic models based on postmodern philosophy, which emphasizes the concept that a person's knowledge of the world is based on his/her perception and internal construction of the "truth" and the belief that reality can never really be known (see Social Constructivist Family therapy).
question
Constitutionalist Self
answer
From narrative therapy, the view of self is plastic and continuously deconstructed and reconstructed through interactions. The sense of self derives from experiences that fit into the dominant narrative. The therapist and client co-construct a new self that is more congruent with the client's preferred outcome.
question
Conjoint Marital Therapy
answer
A model of marital therapy developed by Satir in which both partners are seen together by one or two therapists. The treatment is designed for married couples without children and in which one or both of the partners has either a psychiatric disorder or a social diagnosis e.g., (alcoholism, gambling, extramarital affair).
question
Conjoint
answer
Therapy that involves two or more family members, introduced by MRI psychiatrist, Jackson in 1959 to describe marital therapy in which the spouses were seen together (see Collaborative & Concurrent).
question
Confidentiality
answer
Confidentiality refers to the ethical obligation of the therapist to protect the client's identity and other personal information. Therapists may not reveal information without the client's consent to third parties except as allowed by the governing licensing body and/or as outlined in the Ethical Guidelines of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy.
question
Conductor
answer
A therapist whose stance is to be aggressive, confrontational, and charming (see Reactors).
question
Concurrent Couples Therapy
answer
Couples therapy in which one therapist works with both spouses at different times (see Collaborative & Conjoint).
question
Computer
answer
From Satir's experiential family therapy, one of the five communication styles. The computer is rational, but often attempts to sway others by referring to outside "authorities."
question
Complainant
answer
From solution-focused therapy, one of three ways to characterize the level of participation and commitment to change. This client brings a specific problem, but is currently unwilling to focus on a solution.
question
Complementarity
answer
An interactional pattern in which members of an intimate relationship establish roles and take on behavioral patterns which fulfill the unconscious needs and demands of the other.
question
Communication Theory
answer
Originated by the MRI group, the study of the process by which verbal and non-verbal information is exchanged within a relationship. Communication can be analogic which has little structure, but is rich in content, or digital which is verbal communication perceived and interpreted based on meaning. (see various types of communications: Haptic; Kinesthetic; Paralinguistic; and Streptic).
question
Collusion
answer
A family system defense mechanism in which members cooperate by unconsciously sharing thoughts and feelings. The defense is used to protect family members from threatening outside forces. For example, both spouses and children may collude to perceive an alcoholic member who induces friends and family to drink with him, as simply a light hearted partygoer.
question
Collaborative Language Family Therapy
answer
From Goolishian and Anderson, a model of family therapy based on the idea that problems are maintained in the family's language and may be resolved by changes in their use of language. The therapist asks questions from a not knowing stance, designed to draw out the client's own views of the problem. The problem is "dissolved" as new meanings and actions evolve.
question
Collaborative Family Health Care
answer
Bloch and his followers use teams with other medical care providers - nurses, physicians, or rehabilitation specialists - to help families cope more effectively with the consequences of medical illnesses.
question
Collaborative Couples Therapy
answer
Couples treatment in which each partner is seen by his/her own therapist (See Concurrent & Conjoint).
question
Cohesion
answer
From Olson's Circumplex Model, a measure of the strength of the emotional bonds between and among family members.
question
Cognitive Maps
answer
Mental models by which incoming information is perceived, understood, transformed, and stored, together with a corresponding repertoire of behavioral options. __________ are based on the integration of experiences. Each part of the __________ — i.e., input and output — forms the individual's internal representation of reality. _________ shape actions and communication. They may be flexible, able to change and expand cumulatively with new information and experiences, or they may be rigid and limiting. _______ have both language and spatial aspects with a private vocabulary and imagery that determines how incoming communication is interpreted.
question
Cognitive Behavior Family Therapy (CBT)
answer
Therapies based on both behavioral techniques, which grew out of scientific, laboratory experiments, and on the cognitive therapy models. People learn to modify behaviors both by altering the reinforcement contingencies and/or changing the cognitions that influence their behaviors and interactions.
question
Coercion (Aversive Control)
answer
From behavioral family therapy, one person uses aversive stimuli to control the behavior of another.
question
Coding Schemas
answer
Used in information management and research, these systems establish an organized and consistent approach to identifying and counting clinical phenomena.
question
Coalitions
answer
A concept described by Minuchin (structural model) in which two family members form a covert alliance, either temporary or durable, against a third. __________________ usually form across generational boundaries, for example, between one parent and a child against the other parent or another child. _______________ create power blocks in families, which serve either to balance another coalition or establish control.
question
Coaching
answer
In Bowenian therapy (used by other models as well), the use of an objective person, such as the therapist, to guide a family member to interact with other members in new ways and prevent the family from seducing the person back into older, dysfunctional behaviors. The therapist takes an educative role, rather than an emotional one.
question
Closed System
answer
A self-contained system with impermeable boundaries which resists change and operates with minimal interactions with its outside environment, thereby increasing its dysfunction.
question
Classical Conditioning
answer
A learning paradigm studied and practiced in a laboratory or other controlled environment in which a stimulus called the unconditioned stimulus (US) which naturally elicits an unconditioned response (UCR), is paired with a neutral stimulus that does not initially elicit a response. Through the repeated pairings, the neutral stimulus (now the conditioned stimulus - CS) begins to elicit the desired response (now the conditioned response - CR).
question
Circumplex Model
answer
A graphic model for observing and assessing families designed by Olson, which measures the family's levels of cohesion and adaptability. Families with too much cohesion tend to function as enmeshed, and those with too little can be disengaged. Too much adaptability can result in excessive and unpredictable change, while too little can result in rigidity and failure to transition through the life cycle. Healthy families will be balanced, having neither too much nor too little of either quality. Olson's evaluation tool, FACES is used to apply the Circumplex Model to family assessment.
question
Circular Questioning
answer
A technique for interviewing and hypothesis validation designed by the Milan systemic group, based on Bateson's idea that people learn by perceiving differences. In this technique, each family member comments on the behavior and interactions of two other members. It is hoped that beliefs will become less rigid when members are exposed to different perspectives.
question
Circularity (Circular Causality)
answer
The notion held by the Milan systemic group that causality in families cannot be thought of as a simple, single cause and effect relationship (linear causality). Instead, events, behaviors, and interactions are seen in a more complex way, as mutually influencing one another (feedback loops). Each is the effect of a prior cause and in turn influences future behaviors. Family system events create an endless (and beginning-less) circular chain. In this model it is meaningless to identify an individual as having caused or started a problem. Instead, all elements of the problem coexist and are reciprocally reinforcing. The problem could not be maintained if any one element were to be removed.
question
Change
answer
From structural family therapy, perspective ______________ is the process by which elements of a system are transformed to new states or levels of organization. 2) developmental system _______________ refers to the family life cycle and the transition of the family from one stage of development to another.
question
Centripetal
answer
Defined by Beavers as part of the Beavers-Timberlawn Model, a family system dynamic in which members are tightly bound to one another emotionally and encouraged to seek gratification from one another.
question
Centrifugal
answer
Defined by Beavers as part of the Beavers-Timberlawn Model, a family system dynamic in which members are expelled or encouraged to operate at the outer periphery and seek gratification outside the family.
question
Central Ego
answer
From object relations theory, one of three parts of the ego. The Central Ego is conscious, adaptable, and free to deal with future experiences with attachment figures in reasonable ways. The central ego maintains its own object, the ideal object (see Rejecting Ego & Exciting Ego).
question
Center for Disease Control - CDC
answer
The U.S. Government agency that, among other things, tracks the incidence of communicable diseases and defines criteria for diagnosis of AIDS.
question
Case-Specific Symptom Prescription
answer
A therapeutic technique of the strategic model, in which symptomatic or other undesirable behaviors are paradoxically encouraged in order to lessen such behavior or bring it under conscious control.
question
Caring Days
answer
From behavioral marital therapy, each partner identifies behaviors that his/her partner finds enjoyable and makes a commitment to increasing those behaviors (see Love Days).
question
Brief Family Therapy
answer
A model of problem-focused and time-limited therapy developed by the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, CA. Milton Erickson and others.
question
Bowenian Family Therapy
answer
Bowen's theory and therapeutic model is based on the family's emotional system, the differentiation of self within one's family, and the multi-generational transmission of emotions and family patterns.
question
Boundary Making
answer
A structural therapy technique in which the therapist establishes a functional semi-permeable (clear) boundary where either a rigid or diffuse boundary had existed previously.
question
Boundary Interface
answer
The regions between each subsystem of the family and between the family and the suprasystem. In family systems therapy this interface is referred to as the familial boundary.
question
Boundary
answer
In Minuchin's structural family therapy, ____________________ are hypothetical dividers between or among subsystems within the family or between systems. They are defined spatially by the ways family members align with one another. They are set by the implicit or explicit rules concerning who participates in which subsystem and in what manner. _____________________ and the subsystems they define may change over time and with variable circumstances. In the structural model, ________________ are described as either rigid, clear, or diffuse.
question
Blamer
answer
From Satir's experiential family therapy, one of five communication styles. The _________________ judges and complains, often for the purpose of bullying others into accepting his/her preferences.
question
Binuclear Family
answer
Families in which the parents are divorced, have remarried, and formed two intact nuclear families.
question
Bi-Modal Feedback Mechanism
answer
From Ashby, the rule-bound mechanism by which a system remains unchanged so long as the internal or external environment is stable, but when the fluctuation exceeds the range of stability the system must respond in some new way. The system either breaks down or it makes a leap into new levels of functioning. The change results in a new set of patterns which, like the old pattern, is also bound by rules, and it, too, remains unchanged, so long as the environment is stable.
question
Biobehavioral
answer
Biological factors that influence behavior, e.g. depression, that is caused, in part, by faulty neurochemistry.
question
Bilateral Transference
answer
A therapeutic stance in symbolic-experiential therapy in which the therapist adopts the language, accent, rhythm, or posture of the family.
question
Bilateral Pseudo-Therapy
answer
From symbolic-experiential therapy, the tendency in some families for family members to be therapists to one another. Therapists demand that the therapy be turned over to them, asserting that the family has failed in its efforts at self-therapy (See Battle for Structure & Battle for Initiative).
question
Bicultural
answer
People who belong to more than one culture and who are able to alternate between the cultures, adjusting temporarily to each depending on the circumstance.
question
Behavioral Parent Training - BPT
answer
A program for training parents in the use of contingency management to modify or extinguish unwanted behaviors and reinforce desirable behaviors in children.
question
Behavioral Family Therapy - BFT
answer
A theory and therapeutic model developed by Patterson, Reid, and others, based on principles of learning and behavior change. In BFT, all family members are seen as part of the problem and symptoms are reformulated into concrete observable behaviors, each of which will either be rewarded or extinguished.
question
Behavioral Exchange Theory
answer
From behavioral family therapy, a way of describing relationships in terms of costs and benefits. Functional relationships have plentiful access to rewards and relatively few costs, while distressed relationships have a scarcity of rewards relative to costs.
question
Beavers - Timberlawn Model
answer
An assessment tool used to rate the dimensions of competence and style in a family's functioning. Competence dimensions are: adequate, optimal, midrange, borderline, and severely dysfunctional. Stylistic dimensions are: centripetal, centrifugal, and mixed.
question
Battle for Structure
answer
Described by Whitaker as the therapist's demand that the family capitulate to his/her way of conducting the therapy, particularly during the initial stages. It is followed by the battle for initiative.
question
Battle for Initiative
answer
Formulated by Whitaker (symbolic-experiential therapy), the ______________ for _______________ follows the battle for structure. In this second battle, the family takes back from the therapist its authority to make choices about what is discussed and about decisions that affect their lives.
question
Baseline
answer
A beginning observable, stable performance measure against which change, particularly behavioral change, can be measured.
question
Balancing Power
answer
Equalizing access to power in a couple which is overly organized by a hierarchy.
question
Irrelevant Stance
answer
From Satir's experiential family therapy, one of five communication stances. The _______________ stance tends to distract others from potential conflict by acting helpless, weak, and lacking an understanding, or distracting.
question
Autopoetic Systems
answer
Originated by postmodern Chilean biologist, Maturana, systems that are self-organizing and self-maintaining, such as biological and human systems. Autopoetic Systems can be described by second-order cybernetics.
question
As If Structure
answer
From symbolic-experiential therapy, family members are encouraged to freely experiment as if they were in the role of the other, so long as they understand that the role-play is symbolic. The process allows family members to alternately experiment and return to their secure roles.
question
Antilibidinal System
answer
From object relations theory, a repressed system within the ego characterized by aggression, rage, and contempt.
question
Antilibidinal Ego
answer
From object relations theory, that part of the ego that is formed from interactions with the rejecting object.
question
Analysis of Variance - ANOVA
answer
A method of statistical analysis which enables researchers to determine the likelihood that a variable being measured (dependent variable) is associated with a second variable (independent variable) by chance alone. If the deviation (variance) from the norm (frequency of association expected by chance alone) is sufficiently large, the variables are likely to be causally related.
question
Allopoetic Systems
answer
Originated by postmodern Chilean biologist, Maturana: systems that can be controlled from the outside, such as machines.
question
Alliance
answer
1. In the structural and strategic models, a bond or affiliation between two or more family members. __________________ differ from coalitions in that they are generally within a subsystem and not hidden.
question
Alcoholics Anonymous - AA
answer
A self-help group that uses a 12-step program for recovery from alcohol addiction.
question
AIDS - Auto-Immune-Deficiency Syndrome
answer
A chronic and infectious disease in which the body's immune system is damaged, making a person vulnerable to a number of serious, sometimes fatal, infections and cancers (see Human Immuno-Suppressant virus).
question
Adaptability
answer
From Olson's Circumplex Model, a measure of the family's ability to respond and adapt to changes in their lives. Also called "flexibility." Families are rated at four levels: rigid, structured, flexible, and chaotic.
question
Acculturation
answer
The process by which immigrant group members adjust to the culture of their new country.
question
AAMFT Code of Ethics
answer
A set of ethical guidelines and rules that all members of AAMFT are required to understand and to follow (AAMFT Ethics Committee, 1991). The functions of the AAMFT ethical code are to define the role of the professional, help guide professional conduct, and serve as a basis for sanctions. Many states have adopted these guidelines as part of their regulation of marriage and family therapists.
question
AAMFT
answer
American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy, Inc., the primary national professional association of MFTs. AAMFT is located in Washington, DC. Although AAMFT makes no direct contribution to the licensing examination, many senior members have contributed test items. AAMFT wrote the Code of Ethics, which is the basis for the MFT ethical codes in all states.
question
Accommodation
answer
Describes a variety of engagement techniques, such as joining, used principally by structural family therapists in which the therapist adapts him/herself to the family's style of interacting.
question
ABC-X Family Crisis Model
answer
Reuben Hill's model used to explain whether or not a stressful event would result in a crisis in some families but not in others. A = the stressor, B = the family's crisis-meeting resources, C = the family's definition of the stressor, and X = the crisis (see Double ABC-X Family Stress Model).
question
Idealization
answer
A tendency to exaggerate the virtues of someone, part of the normal development process in children's relationships to their parents an in intimate partnerships.
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New