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  2. Transference-focused psychotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transference-focused...

    Significant improvements were found in both treatment groups on DSM-IV BPD criteria and on all four of the study's outcome measures (borderline psychopathology, general psychopathology, quality of life, and TFP/SFT personality concepts) after 1-, 2-, and 3-years. Schema-focused therapy (SFT, or schema therapy as it is now commonly known) was ...

  3. Focusing (psychotherapy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focusing_(psychotherapy)

    At the University of Chicago, beginning in 1953, Eugene Gendlin did 15 years of research analyzing what made psychotherapy either successful or unsuccessful. His conclusion was that it is not the therapist's technique that determines the success of psychotherapy, but rather the way the patient behaves, and what the patient does inside himself during the therapy sessions.

  4. Psychoeducation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychoeducation

    Psychoeducation in behavior therapy has its origin in the patient's relearning of emotional and social skills. In the last few years increasingly systematic group programs have been developed, in order to make the knowledge more understandable to patients and their families. [5]

  5. Integrative psychotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrative_psychotherapy

    Some of the more common therapies include: psychodynamic psychotherapy, transactional analysis, cognitive behavioral therapy, gestalt therapy, body psychotherapy, family systems therapy, person-centered psychotherapy, and existential therapy. Hundreds of different theories of psychotherapy are practiced. [2] A new therapy is born in several stages.

  6. Contemplative psychotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contemplative_psychotherapy

    Contemplative psychotherapy is said to have two primary influences: the 2,500-year-old wisdom tradition of Buddhism and the clinical traditions of Western psychology, particularly the Humanistic school. Like all offspring, it shares characteristics with both "parents" while remaining uniquely its own.

  7. Dyadic developmental psychotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyadic_Developmental...

    Dyadic developmental therapy principally involves creating a "playful, accepting, curious, and empathic" environment in which the therapist attunes to the child's "subjective experiences" and reflects this back to the child by means of eye contact, facial expressions, gestures and movements, voice tone, timing and touch, "co-regulates ...

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  9. Positive psychotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_psychotherapy

    Positive psychotherapy (PPT) is a therapeutic approach developed by Nossrat Peseschkian during the 1970s and 1980s. [2] [3] [4] Initially known as "differentiational analysis", it was later renamed as positive psychotherapy when Peseschkian published his work in 1977, which was subsequently translated into English in 1987.