Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. — 518 p. — ISBN 978-1-119-94303-7.
A pioneer of CBT explores recent advances in neuroscience, showing how they can be applied in practice to improve the effectiveness of cognitive therapy for clients with a wide range of diagnoses including mood disorders, anxiety disorders, eating disorders and schizophrenia
Neuroscience in ContextNeuroscience, Clinical Psychology, and Cognitive Therapy
The Mind–Brain Problem
Motor Theories of Mind and a Complex Biocybernetic Model in Neuroscience
Complexity, Chaos, and Dynamical Systems
Modular and Gradiental Brain, Coalitional Mind
Phylogenesis of the Brain and Ontogenesis of the Mind: Biological and Cultural Evolutionism
Clinical Psychophysiology and its ParametersPsychophysiology and Clinical Psychophysiology
Electroencephalography and Quantitative Electroencephalography
Electrodermal Activity and Quantitative Electrodermal Activity
Complex Psychological Diagnosis and Instrumental Psychodiagnostics
Neuroscience-based Methods in the Clinical SettingComplex Psychological Diagnosis with Quantitative Electroencephalography
Complex Psychological Diagnosis with Quantitative Electrodermal Activity
Sets and Settings when Applying a Neuroscience-based Clinical Methodology
Multimodal Assessment of Family Process and the “Family Strange Situation”
Biofeedback, Neurofeedback, and Psychofeedback
Meditation, Mindfulness, and Biofeedback-based Mindfulness (BBM)
Neurofeedback and Cognitive Therapy
Psychofeedback and Cognitive Therapy
Monitoring the Warning Signs of Relapse in Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder, and Coping with Them
Get Started with Neuroscience-based Cognitive Therapy