问题 单项选择题 A1型题

在某种行为发生后给予减弱某种行为倾向的刺激被称为()

A.奖励

B.惩罚

C.消退

D.强化

E.恢复

答案

参考答案:B

单项选择题 案例分析题

一般资料:求助者,女性,54岁,退休教师。案例介绍:求助者兄弟姐妹多,父亲已于多年前去世,自己主动把母亲接回家照顾。其大哥、大姐年龄较大,二哥体弱多病,二姐在国外,三姐照顾怀孕的女儿,因此都没有照顾母亲。求助者因为赡养问题与哥哥、姐姐们发生矛盾,自己很生气,也为此很痛苦,主动来进行心理咨询。下面是心理咨询师与该求助者的一段对话:心理咨询师:你能说说你生气的原因吗?求助者:我是家里最小的,母亲已经由我照顾多年了,同样是母亲所生,他们怎么就不来照顾照顾呢?我即使能干,照顾母亲也不应该是我一个人的事呀!我说他们,他们还不听,为这些事总发生矛盾,搞得关系很紧张。心理咨询师:是别人不听你的话使你生气吗?求助者:那当然是,如果他们听我的话,也来照顾母亲,我怎么会生气?心理咨询师:按你所说,你说话别人就应该听,他们应该听你的话,来照顾母亲。求助者:是的,我很生气,他们怎么这样不懂事!心理咨询师:因此,你信奉的是一个人讲话,另一个人就应该听。求助者:对,他们应该听。心理咨询师:因此,别人讲话你肯定听。求助者:对,…不对,(沉默)好像不是,别人说得对,我都听了;别人说得错,我也没听。心理咨询师:你刚说过一个人讲话,另一个人就应该听,而你又讲了别人说得对,你都听了;别人说得错,你也没听,这似乎有些矛盾,你能解释一下吗?求助者:(沉默)…我照顾母亲是孝顺,他们也有责任。他们应该听我的。心理咨询师:按你的意思,你照顾母亲,别人也必须听你的来照顾母亲。求助者:是的。心理咨询师:你对母亲怎样,你的哥哥姐姐就应该对你的母亲怎样。求助者:是的。心理咨询师:实际上呢?求助者:(语塞)恰好不是这样,我说了他们不听。心理咨询师:你说了而他们怎么会不听?求助者:你的意思是我说了他们,他们也可以不听?心理咨询师:你说呢?求助者:(沉默)难道他们真的可以不听?心理咨询师:你认为你生气是由于你的哥哥和姐姐们不听你的话,不来照顾你的母亲所造成的。其实别人不来照顾你的母亲只是一个事件,你要求别人必须像你一样来照顾你的母亲这是你的信念。你的信念有的是合理的,有的是不合理的,不同的信念会导致不同的情绪状态。如果你认识到自己现在的情绪状态是一些不合理的信念所造成的。通过改变它,你就能控制自己的情绪。求助者:真会这样么?心理咨询师:你照顾母亲这件事,别人也可能遇到,但别人不一定都像你现在这样子,你说这是怎么回事?求助者:你是说我和他们不一样么?可我还没看出我要求他们照顾母亲有哪些不合理的地方。心理咨询师:如果把一枚硬币抛向天空,落回来时是怎样的?求助者:当然是有两种可能。一种字朝上,一种是徽朝上。心理咨询师:当你提出要求时,是不是就像把硬币抛向天空一样?求助者:我好像明白了,本来有两种可能的事。我就要求了一种?心理咨询师:你对别人提出要求,并要求他们必须听你的,这是一种绝对化的要求,一种不合理的信念。如果我们把对别人的"要求"变成"希望",当我们不希望的事发生时,最多是一种失望,不会过分的怨恨别人,自己也就不会生气了。求助者:你讲得很对。

心理咨询师说"按你所说……",表明其()。

A.实施对求助者的教育

B.启发求助者思考

C.按求助者的信念推理

D.改变求助者信念

填空题

[A] Possible ways to keep free from Alzheimer’s

[B] Deficiency of data-collecting in the study

[C] The new findings of ineffectiveness of past cures

[D] Weak evidence of the research

[E] How the new analysis coming from

[F] Future direction of the research concerned

[G] Traditional beliefs in preventive measures

Lifestyle May Not Prevent Alzheimer’s

A comprehensive analysis by an independent government panel has found that there is not enough scientific evidence to date to support the advice doctors currently give—such as exercising, doing crossword puzzles or eating a Mediterranean-style diet—for preventing or controlling symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia.

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As rates of age-related dementia and Alzheimer’s disease have continued to rise in the U.S.—largely because Americans are living longer and the over-65 population has swelled to record highs—researchers have worked relentlessly to understand the causes of these mind- robbing diseases and to help prevent or slow their progression. To clarify the state of the current evidence and offer physicians clearer treatment guidelines, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in early 2009 commissioned a detailed analysis of existing studies, covering 165 papers published between 1984 and 2009.

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For years, the prevailing hypothesis has been "Use it or lose it" when it comes to avoiding gradual age-related mental decline. Data has associated behaviors such as keeping the mind actively engaged throughout life, staying physically active, eating certain foods and supplementing the diet with specific vitamins and nutrients with lower rates of dementia in old age. These lifestyle factors appeared to limit cognitive decline of various kinds, from occasional "senior moments" to the more serious episodes of cognitive impairment that can be a prelude to Alzheimer’s disease.

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Now researchers at Duke University report in the current issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine that the data on the preventive effects of lifestyle factors is not as p as they had thought. Led by Brenda Plassman, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, the study authors analyzed decades’ worth of research, including observational studies in which scientists looked retrospectively at a group of participants to tease out associations between certain behaviors (like exercise) and selected effects (like scores on tests of memory and cognitive skills), as well as the more definitive clinical trials that randomly assign volunteers to intervention or control groups and then assess how the intervention affects cognitive ability.

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Overall, the researchers say they were dismayed with the paucity and weakness of the existing evidence. "When we applied rigorous but consistent standards to review all the studies, we found that there was not sufficient evidence to recommend any single activity or factor that was protective of cognitive decline later in life, " says Plassman.

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However weakly, though, the review did support what doctors know about risk factors for cognitive decline: smoking, diabetes, depression, metabolic syndrome and specific gene variants were all linked with increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. In addition, preventive behaviors such as eating a Mediterranean diet, exercising, maintaining cognitive engagement (doing puzzles, learning new things) and fostering extensive social relationships were linked to a lower risk.

The problem is that none of these relationships were particularly robust, the authors say. And none were p enough to justify recommending the behaviors to people who want to prevent or slow down the onset of dementia. The findings led the NIH to issue Monday’s state-of-the-science statement, in which the agency notes, "Currently, firm conclusions cannot be drawn about the association of any modifiable risk factor with cognitive decline or Alzheimer’s disease." Although the statement does not constitute an official policy or government recommendation, it serves as a guideline for doctors advising patients about the best evidence on the role of lifestyle factors in Alzheimer’s prevention.

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