Behavior modification is not cognitive—and other myths: A reply to Ledwidge Edwin A. Locke OriginalPaper Pages: 119 - 125
Cognitive behavior modification: The need for a fairer assessment Donald Meichenbaum OriginalPaper Pages: 127 - 132
Cognitive behavior modification: A rejoinder to Locke and to Meichenbaum Barry Ledwidge OriginalPaper Pages: 133 - 139
Depression, hypomania, and expectation of future success among alcoholics Dennis M. DonovanMichael R. O'Leary OriginalPaper Pages: 141 - 154
Perceived sex role attitudes in self and other as a determinant of differential assertiveness in college males Elizabeth P. HessPhilip H. Bornstein OriginalPaper Pages: 155 - 159
Insomnia: A comparison of the effects of pill attributions and nonpejorative self-attributions Carol R. LoweryDouglas R. DenneyMichael D. Storms OriginalPaper Pages: 161 - 164
An analysis of the nature and effects of test anxiety: Cognitive, behavioral, and physiological components James G. Hollandsworth Jr.Robert C. GlazeskiLaura R. Van Norman OriginalPaper Pages: 165 - 180
Coping imagery, systematic desensitization, and self-concept change William F. HodgesMarci McCaulayKirk Strosahl OriginalPaper Pages: 181 - 192
Faulty thinking patterns in two types of anxiety Karen Sutton-SimonMarvin R. Goldfried OriginalPaper Pages: 193 - 203
The effect of beliefs on maximum weight-lifting performance R. Gary NessRobert W. Patton OriginalPaper Pages: 205 - 211
Effects of cognitive-adjunct treatments on assertiveness Paul A. DerryGerald L. Stone OriginalPaper Pages: 213 - 221