コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 te sessions (ie, 19.5 hours) with a clinical psychologist.
2 k group CBT program with a licensed clinical psychologist.
3 egative symptoms were measured by a clinical psychologist.
4 s aided by the guidance of an organizational psychologist.
5 n comprised 4 to 6 telephone sessions with a psychologist.
6 and July 5, 2013) were assessed by a blinded psychologist.
7 arm of the trial were referred to a clinical psychologist.
8 ation by primatologists, anthropologists and psychologists.
9 ssessments are conducted by psychiatrists or psychologists.
10 xcellent ethologists, but on the whole, poor psychologists.
11 iry among social, personality, and political psychologists.
12 career decisions is the focus of vocational psychologists.
13 parison group homes had an enriched staff of psychologists.
14 ample of 1,901 experienced psychiatrists and psychologists.
15 nd how formal tools can be useful for social psychologists.
16 nteractions independently coded by a team of psychologists.
17 n attitudes toward prescribing authority for psychologists.
18 n that is delivered in 4 sessions by trained psychologists.
19 arch poses a number of unusual challenges to psychologists.
20 plan provided by clinicians, dietitians, and psychologists.
21 essions of manualized CBT delivered by local psychologists.
22 15, 18, 21, and 24 months of age by trained psychologists.
23 nistered by trained and calibrated qualified psychologists.
24 second-order memory long known by behavioral psychologists.
25 nostically and psychometrically evaluated by psychologists.
26 y nephrologists, surgeons, and psychiatrists/psychologists.
27 appealing concept for social and personality psychologists.
28 providers, registered dietitians, and health psychologists.
29 and experienced nurses, social workers, and psychologists.
30 ase of clinical symptoms by neurologists and psychologists.
31 minutes each, delivered by trained clinical psychologists.
32 Do large datasets provide value to psychologists?
33 ) nurses, 736 (31.7%) physicians, 187 (8.1%) psychologists, 183 (7.9%) administrators, 154 (6.7%) den
36 , anatomists, physiologists, physicists, and psychologists, aiming to relate visual psychophysics to
39 manager and a pharmacist by telephone, and a psychologist and a psychiatrist via videoconferencing.
40 ical intervention (6 meetings with a medical psychologist and bi-weekly phone calls) versus standard
41 transplant hepatologist, transplant surgeon, psychologist and psychiatrist is becoming mandatory to p
43 both a growing interest in creativity among psychologists and a growing fragmentation in the field.
46 Nearly 25 years ago, the shared interests of psychologists and biologists in understanding the neural
47 r health and a growing collaboration between psychologists and cardiovascular scientists to achieve s
51 as provision of additional services (such as psychologists and dietetics) were highlighted by parents
54 This question has been investigated by both psychologists and economists in the past and received co
56 d by behavioural ecologists and evolutionary psychologists and establishing a roadmap for future rese
60 n of long-standing interest to philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists is how the brain selec
61 this progress, collaborative efforts between psychologists and neuroscientists remain limited, hinder
64 natural scientists and engineers, as well as psychologists and other behavioral scientists, worked to
65 This Review, which is aimed at neurologists, psychologists and other health professionals who follow
66 s research could aid forensic psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health professionals in a
68 In addition, we detail the contributions of psychologists and other social scientists in helping to
72 - including biologists, medical scientists, psychologists and public health experts - have had a cru
73 apply the framework originally developed by psychologists and social scientists and used by other me
75 ical exam; 68.3% of respondent psychiatrists/psychologists and social workers were willing to accept
76 -to-patient ratios and ready availability of psychologists and spiritual care providers), care protoc
77 ange of response patterns long recognized by psychologists and survey researchers but previously not
78 elligence are of interest to a wide range of psychologists and to many people outside the discipline.
82 pital physicians, anesthesiologists, nurses, psychologists, and caregivers), and type of randomizatio
83 to underpin the training of teachers, school psychologists, and clinicians, so that they can reliably
86 uestion that has fascinated neuroscientists, psychologists, and musicologists for a long time is how
88 social clinicians, including social workers, psychologists, and psychiatrists, is usually required to
90 icians, clinical trialists, epidemiologists, psychologists, applied clinical researchers, clinicians,
98 hort who participated in a substudy in which psychologists assessed IQ using the Wechsler Primary and
105 lief updating in action by tracking research psychologists' beliefs in psychological effects before a
109 receive neuropsychological testing or visit psychologists but more likely to be diagnosed and treate
110 been studied extensively by philosophers and psychologists, but their neuroanatomical substrates are
112 tible with moderate levels of what political psychologists call 'authoritarianism' that also incorpor
113 the critical role of theory, and discuss how psychologists can add historical depth and nuance to the
116 y studying these high-level representations, psychologists can now gain new insights into the nature
117 ist), social worker, transplant coordinator, psychologist, clinical pharmacist], electronic reminder
120 accounting for individual behavior, and ego psychologists' concepts of the organizing functions of t
122 nfidence reflects knowledge about knowledge, psychologists consider this the domain of metacognition.
125 e domains of interest to both economists and psychologists: decision making under risk and uncertaint
127 cation optimization (MED group) (n = 131) or psychologist-delivered CBT (CBT group) (n = 130) for 6 m
131 lations across 22 traits commonly studied by psychologists, economists, sociologists, anthropologists
134 2 for primary care, euro 4.85 +/- 136.84 for psychologists, euro 21.24 +/- 82.47 for diagnosis and eu
136 the complexity of the issue and the dilemmas psychologists face, while providing a basis for further
140 ists provided significantly more visits than psychologists for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, subst
141 are clinics without on-site psychiatrists or psychologists from 12 federally qualified health centers
143 istribution of patients among psychiatrists, psychologists, general medical physicians, and other hea
161 tion is a fascinating field and one in which psychologists have much to contribute, both to the devel
163 ueled by our interactions and relationships, psychologists have often overlooked the social forces th
166 then review the methodological changes that psychologists have proposed and, in some cases, embraced
173 iplinary panel (consisting of clinicians and psychologists/human factors specialists) of experts in s
175 apists differed in their opinions from other psychologist in emotional valence and four categories.
176 orientation and research interests of social psychologists in capitalist Western countries versus pos
177 s unique to DNA methylation studies to guide psychologists in incorporating DNA methylation into a pr
180 ribe my professional life as an experimental psychologist, in which I've eavesdropped on this process
182 ce has attracted attention from experimental psychologists interested in gathering human subject data
183 nal approach among behavioral economists and psychologists interested in judgment and decision making
184 onnaire SF-36 with the assistance of trained psychologist interviewers within 3 months after a detail
187 er support were identified: community based, psychologist-led outpatient, models-based within ICU fol
189 planations proposed by economists and social psychologists maintain that attractiveness is a marker o
191 vatives would provide advantages, and social psychologists may not be as opposed to increasing the nu
192 te to self-correction within psychology, but psychologists may underweight their evidentiary value.
195 ational sample of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists (N=1,201) described a randomly selected cu
196 ational sample of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists (N=1,201) described a randomly selected cu
197 ational sample of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists (N=203) completed the Therapist Response Q
198 ational sample of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists (N=291) described a randomly selected pati
199 hose of the professional groups of assistant psychologists (n=87) and graduate workers (n=66) (P<0.01
200 , social workers [n = 5], ethicists [n = 2], psychologist [n = 1]) from 20 centers in 10 countries.
202 rk is integral to human functioning, and all psychologists need to understand the role of work in peo
205 ed that they had neither the parents nor the psychologist of having used alcohol and/or substances.
209 dy analysed 193 written comments from Polish psychologists on the idea of granting their profession t
213 io [OR], 0.83; 95% CI, 0.70-0.98) or visit a psychologist (OR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.60-0.85) compared with
214 east 1 diagnosis (1) given by psychiatrists, psychologists, or neurologists; (2) hospital discharge d
215 t were conducted virtually by psychiatrists, psychologists, or social workers within a calendar month
217 However, methodological research finds that psychologists overgeneralize the benchmarks so that they
218 and emergency medical workers, optometrists, psychologists, personal care workers, physiotherapists,
219 and cognitive sciences, including linguists, psychologists, philosophers, neuroscientists, primatolog
220 ultants, primary care general practitioners, psychologists, physiotherapists, and an occupational the
221 nical cancer expertise-from epidemiologists, psychologists, policy makers, and cancer specialists-has
222 onsider societies beyond nations, and social psychologists predominantly focus on ethnicities and oth
223 es and interdisciplinary teams (specialists, psychologists, primary care providers, mental health pro
224 list(s), specialist nurse, dietitian, health psychologist); prompt recognition and management of comp
225 udies, a large nationwide sample of clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, and clinical social worker
226 takeholders, including surgeons, clinicians, psychologists, psychiatrists, ethicists, policymakers, a
227 atients who received mental health care from psychologists, psychiatrists, general medical physicians
228 fessionals who work with children (eg, child psychologists, psychiatrists, teachers, and social worke
230 s including its renewed respectability among psychologists, rapid progress in the neuroscience of per
232 relied more on psychodynamic approaches, and psychologists relied more on behavioral therapies relati
236 h care providers such as practice nurses and psychologists should routinely enquire about sleep habit
241 cipation from clinicians, specialist nurses, psychologists, social workers, and, in some countries, n
242 have been studied by economists, biologists, psychologists, sociologists, and political scientists.
243 ocesses that are of longstanding interest to psychologists such as cognition and affect, attribution,
245 ychologist Jonathan Crystal and evolutionary psychologist Thomas Suddendorf debate with nonhuman anim
249 rogram can be broadly used by biologists and psychologists to accelerate neurological, pharmacologica
250 of acceptability - whereas it is the task of psychologists to determine how language is processed, an
251 ional Compact (PSYPACT), permitting clinical psychologists to provide telehealth services across stat
252 largely coincidental events led experimental psychologists to realize that their approach to collecti
253 tervention, delivered by supervised graduate psychologists to staff in six interactive sessions.
254 tal conditioning is often used by behavioral psychologists to train an animal (or human) to produce a
256 hundred three experienced psychiatrists and psychologists used a Q-sort procedure (the Shedler-Weste
257 nal sample of 530 psychiatrists and clinical psychologists used the Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedu
258 A total of 496 experienced psychiatrists and psychologists used the Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedu
259 l of 797 randomly selected psychiatrists and psychologists used the SWAP-200 to describe either an ac
260 onal sample of experienced psychiatrists and psychologists used the SWAP-200 to describe either their
261 iteria by a trained and experienced clinical psychologist using a semistructured clinical interview f
262 and psychologic stability were assessed by a psychologist using in-depth interview techniques and a p
265 ists, radiology and imaging technicians, and psychologists were surveyed from September 17 to Novembe
268 cted by the same nurses, social workers, and psychologists who provided psychotherapy, involved discu
269 urvey study included employed physicians and psychologists who were part of a hospital physician orga
270 women with positive results, as measured by psychologists who were unaware of the group assignments.
271 e impossible have attracted the attention of psychologists, who, in just a couple of decades, have pr
272 gue that many of the interdisciplinary moral psychologists whom May terms "pessimists" are often cons
273 and evidence-based practices on the part of psychologists will increase the sophistication of the ex
274 cle closes by presenting the reasons why (a) psychologists will probably continue to use historical d
275 emporary research participants, occasionally psychologists will study historical persons or events.
276 he Principles of Psychology, philosopher and psychologist William James defined attention as: "... th
278 SD made by pediatricians, psychiatrists, and psychologists with specialty training to assess ASD.