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- Wiley
More About This Title Cognitive-Behavioural Management of Tic Disorders
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- English
English
In 1988, he was awarded the first of a series of fellowships by the Fonds de la recherche en Santè du Quèbec, and established a clinical research program at the Fernand-Seguin Research Center, Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital, University of Montreal, Canada. The multidisciplinary research program, which focuses on obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), Tourette and tic disorder and delusional disorder, is currently funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. He is actively involved in several community-based initiatives to provide support and information to people with OCD and Tourette's syndrome and their families, and is scientific advisor to the Quebec OCD Foundation.
He is currently associate research professor at the Psychiatry Department of University of Montreal, and also holds an honorary cross appointment as associate professor in the department of Psychology, University of Quebec at Montreal. He is author or co-author on over 1000 scientific publications. He is also co-authored with Frederick Aardema and Marie-Claude Pèlissier of Beyond Reasonable Doubt: Reasoning Processes in ODC Disorder and Related Disorders, published in 2005 by Wiley.
- English
English
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
Chapter 1. The Nature of Tic Disorders.
Definition.
Diagnosis.
What counts as a tic?
Comorbidity and covariation.
Secondary distress.
Prevalence.
Relationship of tics with other disruptive behaviors.
Distinguishing impulsions and compulsions: sensory tics, cognitive tics and obsessions.
Emotional associations.
Self-management strategies.
Coping strategies maintaining the tic cycle.
Functional analysis and situational variability.
Conclusions.
Chapter 2. Understanding Tic Disorders: Etiological Models.
Overview of neurobiological models.
Neurophysiological studies.
Neurobiological treatments.
Genetic factors.
Psychosocial factors.
Neuropsychological aspects.
Emotional regulation.
Learning model.
Psychological treatments.
Behavioral approaches.
Abbreviated versions of habit reversal.
Other tension prevention and exposure techniques.
Conclusions.
Chapter 3. Motor Processing in Tic Disorders.
Motor processing.
Psychology of action.
Tics as behavioral acts.
Human ecology of action.
Motor psychophysiology.
Chronic muscle tension.
The role of frustration in tic onset.
Tic onset and muscle use: the frustration–action/tense–release cycle.
Perfectionist styles of action.
Heightened sensorimotor awareness.
Dysregulation of motor activation cycle and sensory feedback mechanisms.
A cognitive-behavioral/motorpsychophysiological model of tic disorder.
Clinical implications.
Conclusions.
Chapter 4. Empirical Studies Testing the Cognitive–psychophysiological Model.
Overview.
Behavioral activity associated with tic onset in chronic tic and habit disorders.
Validation of a style of planning action (STOP) as a discriminator between tic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and generalized anxiety.
Brain–behavior relations during motor processing in chronic tic and habit disorders.
A cognitive-behavioral program for the management of chronic tic disorders.
Does behavior therapy modify visuo-motor performance in chronic tic disorder?
Conclusions.
Chapter 5. Future Directions.
The cognitive-behavioral/psychophysiological conceptualization of tic disorders.
Implications for future research.
The TS–OCD spectrum.
Separating impulse from compulse: the case of cognitive tics.
Adaptation of the program to children and to other groups with special needs.
Application of the program to other tension problems.
Chapter 6. Therapist Manual.
Overview of the program.
Assessment procedures.
Ten-stage program.
Session by session protocol.
Trouble-shooting guide.
Case illustrations.
Chapter 7. Client Manual.
Introduction: who is the manual for?
About tics.
A cognitive-behavioral management approach to changing habits.
Overview of tic management model.
Motivation.
Mind over muscle.
Awareness training.
Identifying high- and low-risk activities, and associated thoughts and feelings.
Muscle discrimination exercises.
Relaxing in three dimensions.
Refocusing sensations.
Thinking in action.
Rethinking your thinking.
Beliefs relevant to planning action.
Motor and behavioral restructuring.
Maintaining the new behavior.
Conclusions.
Appendices.
Appendix 1: Questionnaires 1a–1h.
Appendix 2: Manual worksheets 2a–2j.
Appendix 3: Cognitive tics: special Considerations.
Appendix 4: Tic-monitoring diary.
Appendix 5: Graphic examples from daily diaries.
Appendix 6: Daily diary forms and questionnaire.
Appendix 7: Tic quiz.
Appendix 8: Follow-up questionnaire.
Appendix 9: Answers to tic quiz.
References.
Index.