Steven C. Hayes (born August 12, 1948)[1] is an American clinical psychologist and Nevada Foundation Professor at the University of Nevada, Reno Department of Psychology, where he is a faculty member in their Ph.D. program in behavior analysis, and coined the term clinical behavior analysis. He is known for devising a behavior analysis of human language and cognition called relational frame theory, and its clinical application to various psychological difficulties, such as anxiety. Hayes also developed a widely used and evidence-based procedure often used in counseling called acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), which relies heavily on counterconditioning techniques, such as mindfulness (a private behavior in radical behaviorism), and positive reinforcement. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_C._Hayes
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: gute frage: what is depersonalization disorder
Depersonalization and Derealization Disorders are dissociative disorders. People with these conditions feel detached from their bodies. Depersonalization means that the individual feels disconnected from their themselves. People who experience depersonalization feel removed from their feelings and their body. They sometimes feel physically and emotionally numb. Some people report that they don?t feel ?real,? as if they?re not a human being. It can be difficult to tell if their memories are theirs.
Derealization occurs when a person feels detached from their environment. Life feels surreal, and they don?t feel connected to what?s happening around them. It?s as if they?re watching themselves from the outside as if their life is a movie. People who experience derealization have intense sensory issues. Things might look blurry or incredibly sharp; things may seem louder than they are in reality. People with both these disorders are aware of what they?re feeling as opposed to people who are experiencing psychosis. Someone who is in a state of depersonalization or derealization knows that what they?re feeling isn?t reality, whereas someone who is psychotic does not.
----------- sometimes antisocial, always antifascist