Foundations of Treatment 123
Habituation
The process by which the emotional response
to a stimulus that elicits fear or anxiety
is reduced by exposing the patient to the
stimulus repeatedly.
Exposure
The behavioral technique that involves
repeated contact with a feared or arousing
stimulus in a controlled setting.
lead him to feel anxious. The consequences of his avoidant behavior include relief
from the anticipatory anxiety.
The therapist assigns homework, important tasks that the patient completes
between therapy sessions. Homework for Leon, for instance, might consist of his
making eye contact with a coworker during the week, or even striking up a brief
conversation about the weather. To prepare for this task, Leon might spend part
of a therapy session practicing making eye contact or making small talk with his
therapist. The success of behavior therapy is measured in terms of the change in
frequency and intensity of the maladaptive behavior and the increase in adaptive
behaviors.
The Role of Classical Conditioning in Behavior Therapy
As we saw with Little Albert in Chapter 2, classical conditioning can give rise to
fears and phobias and, more generally, conditioned emotional responses. To treat
the conditioned emotional responses that are associated with a variety of symptoms
and disorders and to create new, more adaptive learning, behavioral therapists may
employ classical conditioning principles.
Treating Anxiety and Avoidance A common treatment for anxiety disorders, partic-
ularly phobias, is based on the principle of habituation: The emotional response
to a stimulus that elicits fear or anxiety is reduced by exposing the patient to
the stimulus repeatedly. The technique of exposure involves such repeated contact
with the (feared or arousing) stimulus in a controlled setting, and usually in a
gradual way. The patient fi rst creates a hierarchy of feared events, arranging them
from least to most feared (see Table 4.3), and then begins the exposure process by
having contact with the least-feared item on the hierarchy. With sustained expo-
sure, the symptoms diminish within 20–30 minutes or less; that is, habituation to
the fear- or anxiety-inducing stimuli occurs. Over multiple sessions, this process is
repeated with items higher in the hierarchy until all items no longer elicit signifi -
cant symptoms.
Exposure—and therefore habituation—to fear- or anxiety-related stimuli does
not normally occur outside of therapy because people avoid the object or situation,
If Leon constructed a hierarchy of his fears and avoidance of social situations, it might look
something like this completed form. The “Fear” column contains the rating (from 0 to 100, with
100 = very intense fear) that indicates how the patient would feel if he or she were in the given
situation. The “Avoidance” column contains the rating (from 0 to 100, with 100 = always avoids
the situation) that indicates the degree to which the person avoids the situation. Although
Leon avoids almost all the situations on the completed form, some situations arouse more
fear than others.
Situation Fear Avoidance
Give a 1-hour formal lecture to 30 coworkers 100 100
Go out on a date 98 100
Ask a colleague to go out on a date 97 100
Attend a retirement party for a coworker who is retiring 85 100
Have a conversation with the person sitting next to me on the bus 70 100
Ask someone for directions or the time 60 99
Walk around at a crowded mall 50 98
Answer the telephone without checking caller ID 30 85
Source: Adapted from Antony & Swinson, 2000, p. 171.
Table 4.3 • Sample Hierarchy of Fear and Avoidance for Social Situations