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First published in 1995. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Contents: Introduction and Overview: Smoking's Relationship to Individual Differences, Psychopathology And Emotions; Smoking Motivation: Models, Issues, Affect and Emotion, Personality, Temperament and Psychopathology; Evidence of Affect Modulation, Performance Enhancement and Reinforcement; Mechanisms Underlying Nicotine's Reinforcing And Affect-Modulating Effects; Personality, Psychopathology, Tobacco Use and Individual Differences in Effects Of Nicotine; Gender Differences In Tobacco Use And Effects; SituationxTrait Adaptive Response STAR Model of Smoking; Implications of the SituationxTrait Adaptive Response STAR Model for Smoking Intervention.
This book presents an introduction to the study of relationships
among per sonality, social skills, and psychopathology. Although
research findings dur ing the last decade have made it clear that
the relationships among these variables are almost always complex
and mUltiply determined, many clini cians and theoreticians have
not incorporated such complexities into their models of human
behavior and therapeutic intervention. This discrepancy between
clinical theory and research-based findings has been of special con
cern to us because we have been both empirically oriented academic
re searchers and practicing clinicians. It is our belief that
clinical theory relat ed to personality, social skills, and
psychopathology can be enriched by re search findings from a wide
range of fields-from human genetics, tempera ment, and personality
to family systems, affect, psychophysiology, and learning. This
book is divided into an introductory chapter and three sections.
The introductory chapter provides an overview of the issues in the
field, compares models, and provides suggestions for further
integration and ar ticulation of concepts related to personality,
social skills, and psycho pathology. The book's first section
presents state-of-the-art general models of interactions among
personality, social skills, and psychopathology. Con nolly opens
this section with a chapter that reviews longitudinal findings in
dicating that personality traits predict the onset of
psychopathology and marital distress. The etiology of these and
related findings is the subject of other chapters in this section."
This book presents an introduction to the study of relationships
among per sonality, social skills, and psychopathology. Although
research findings dur ing the last decade have made it clear that
the relationships among these variables are almost always complex
and mUltiply determined, many clini cians and theoreticians have
not incorporated such complexities into their models of human
behavior and therapeutic intervention. This discrepancy between
clinical theory and research-based findings has been of special con
cern to us because we have been both empirically oriented academic
re searchers and practicing clinicians. It is our belief that
clinical theory relat ed to personality, social skills, and
psychopathology can be enriched by re search findings from a wide
range of fields-from human genetics, tempera ment, and personality
to family systems, affect, psychophysiology, and learning. This
book is divided into an introductory chapter and three sections.
The introductory chapter provides an overview of the issues in the
field, compares models, and provides suggestions for further
integration and ar ticulation of concepts related to personality,
social skills, and psycho pathology. The book's first section
presents state-of-the-art general models of interactions among
personality, social skills, and psychopathology. Con nolly opens
this section with a chapter that reviews longitudinal findings in
dicating that personality traits predict the onset of
psychopathology and marital distress. The etiology of these and
related findings is the subject of other chapters in this section."
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