James McCullough - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by James McCullough

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive utilization of the transference hypothesis strategy

Research paper thumbnail of Educating patients to manage a lifetime disorder

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive history of CBASP

Research paper thumbnail of Situational analysis example and CBASP treatment goal two: Case one

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive psychopathology of the chronic patient

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive structural format of the CBASP sessions

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive CBASP situational analysis exercise

Research paper thumbnail of CBASP case description (Part A)

Research paper thumbnail of Participant role of the patient in CBASP

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive theoretical foundations of CBASP

Research paper thumbnail of Preparing pre-therapy patients to learn by using contingent personal responsivity

Research paper thumbnail of Operationalized learning goals of CBASP: IDE and SA

Research paper thumbnail of Don’t overestimate the preoperational patient

Research paper thumbnail of Choreographing in-session contingencies so patients learn

Research paper thumbnail of CBASP as a Distinctive Treatment for Persistent Depressive Disorder: Distinctive features

Research paper thumbnail of Situational analysis examples: Cases two and three

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive goals of CBASP treatment

CBASP as a Distinctive Treatment for Persistent Depressive Disorder, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of The interpersonal discrimination exercise and CBASP treatment goal one

Research paper thumbnail of Session 2: The significant other history and transference hypothesis construction

Research paper thumbnail of Do interpersonal fears mediate the association between childhood maltreatment and interpersonal skills deficits? A matched cross-sectional analysis

Psychotherapy research : journal of the Society for Psychotherapy Research, Jan 11, 2018

Childhood maltreatment, interpersonal fear and a specific kind of interpersonal skills deficit (p... more Childhood maltreatment, interpersonal fear and a specific kind of interpersonal skills deficit (preoperational thinking) have all been associated with persistent depressive disorder (PDD). We hypothesize that interpersonal fears mediate the association between childhood maltreatment and preoperational thinking. A total of 108 matched participants have been examined cross-sectionally (31 healthy controls, 30 patients with episodic depression and 47 patients with PDD) with the following instruments: the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ-SF), a measure of interpersonal fear (CBASP Interpersonal Questionnaire) and the Lübeck Questionnaire of Preoperational Thinking. Patients with PDD reported significantly more childhood maltreatment than patients with episodic depression (d = 0.65) and healthy controls (d = 1.29). They also had more interpersonal fears (d = 0.71 and d = 2.11 respectively) and higher levels of preoperational thinking (d = 0.90 and d = 2.78 respectively). The associati...

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive utilization of the transference hypothesis strategy

Research paper thumbnail of Educating patients to manage a lifetime disorder

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive history of CBASP

Research paper thumbnail of Situational analysis example and CBASP treatment goal two: Case one

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive psychopathology of the chronic patient

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive structural format of the CBASP sessions

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive CBASP situational analysis exercise

Research paper thumbnail of CBASP case description (Part A)

Research paper thumbnail of Participant role of the patient in CBASP

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive theoretical foundations of CBASP

Research paper thumbnail of Preparing pre-therapy patients to learn by using contingent personal responsivity

Research paper thumbnail of Operationalized learning goals of CBASP: IDE and SA

Research paper thumbnail of Don’t overestimate the preoperational patient

Research paper thumbnail of Choreographing in-session contingencies so patients learn

Research paper thumbnail of CBASP as a Distinctive Treatment for Persistent Depressive Disorder: Distinctive features

Research paper thumbnail of Situational analysis examples: Cases two and three

Research paper thumbnail of Distinctive goals of CBASP treatment

CBASP as a Distinctive Treatment for Persistent Depressive Disorder, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of The interpersonal discrimination exercise and CBASP treatment goal one

Research paper thumbnail of Session 2: The significant other history and transference hypothesis construction

Research paper thumbnail of Do interpersonal fears mediate the association between childhood maltreatment and interpersonal skills deficits? A matched cross-sectional analysis

Psychotherapy research : journal of the Society for Psychotherapy Research, Jan 11, 2018

Childhood maltreatment, interpersonal fear and a specific kind of interpersonal skills deficit (p... more Childhood maltreatment, interpersonal fear and a specific kind of interpersonal skills deficit (preoperational thinking) have all been associated with persistent depressive disorder (PDD). We hypothesize that interpersonal fears mediate the association between childhood maltreatment and preoperational thinking. A total of 108 matched participants have been examined cross-sectionally (31 healthy controls, 30 patients with episodic depression and 47 patients with PDD) with the following instruments: the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ-SF), a measure of interpersonal fear (CBASP Interpersonal Questionnaire) and the Lübeck Questionnaire of Preoperational Thinking. Patients with PDD reported significantly more childhood maltreatment than patients with episodic depression (d = 0.65) and healthy controls (d = 1.29). They also had more interpersonal fears (d = 0.71 and d = 2.11 respectively) and higher levels of preoperational thinking (d = 0.90 and d = 2.78 respectively). The associati...