Introducing a Ripple Effect Measure: A Theoretical and Empirical Validation

Author(s):  
Elvira-Maria Arvanitou ◽  
Apostolos Ampatzoglou ◽  
Alexander Chatzigeorgiou ◽  
Paris Avgeriou
2012 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 279-297
Author(s):  
문태형 ◽  
곽영환 ◽  
Jaehwan Kim ◽  
Hyuk-Dae Kwon

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugenia Isabel Gorlin ◽  
Michael W. Otto

To live well in the present, we take direction from the past. Yet, individuals may engage in a variety of behaviors that distort their past and current circumstances, reducing the likelihood of adaptive problem solving and decision making. In this article, we attend to self-deception as one such class of behaviors. Drawing upon research showing both the maladaptive consequences and self-perpetuating nature of self-deception, we propose that self-deception is an understudied risk and maintaining factor for psychopathology, and we introduce a “cognitive-integrity”-based approach that may hold promise for increasing the reach and effectiveness of our existing therapeutic interventions. Pending empirical validation of this theoretically-informed approach, we posit that patients may become more informed and autonomous agents in their own therapeutic growth by becoming more honest with themselves.


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