Acting May Help Break Down Barriers for Patients With Mental . . . Using techniques related to acting or role-playing may help people with mental illness be more flexible, spontaneous, and social in their thoughts and behaviors Recent evidence suggests that techniques commonly used by actors may help engage patients in new ways
The sense of self in the aftermath of trauma: lessons from . . . These reports underscore the vulnerability the sense of self has in the aftermath of trauma, where both cognitive and somatic disturbances to the sense of self are thought to reflect remnants of the traumatic past among individuals with PTSD 2 Neural underpinnings of the sense of self: the default mode network
The use of clinical role-play and reflection in learning . . . According to the included studies, clinical role-play facilitates helper–user equality and increases students’ involvement, self-efficacy, and empathic abilities in mental health practice Keywords: review, education, nursing, role-play, reflection, therapeutic communication
Chapter 2 Flashcards - Quizlet both the therapy relationship and the therapy methods used influence the outcomes of treatment, but it essential that the methods used support the therapeutic relationship being formed with the client
Frontiers | Could Acting Training Improve Social Cognition . . . Given the perceived importance of empathy in acting practice, a neuroimaging approach may offer novel insight into the role socio-affective phenomena play during dramatic performance Emotion Regulation and Generation
Increasing a patients sense of security in the hospital: A . . . Fear and anxiety can lead to a decreased sense of security, and thus increased distress and suffering Nurses can act to instead increase a patient's sense of security, often through the development of interpersonal trust, and thus increase their sense of comfort and solace
Could acting training improve social cognition and emotional . . . Acting is fascinating from psychological and neuroscientific perspectives, as it involves an individual creating an endogenously generated, accurate physical and verbal performance of another’s emotional and cognitive states