What the ACT?!
Participants
Values Directed Bx
Procedures
Thoughts?
100

ACT focuses on becoming...more psychologically rigid OR more psychologically flexible 


More Psychologically Flexible

100
How many participants did this study use?

3

100

Describe what values-directed behavior means.

Values-directed behavior was defined as any action resulting in a tangible outcome directly related to an individual parent-identified value

100

Each participant received ____ number of sessions. 

6

100

Give an example of an unhelpful thought a parent might have when their child is having a public tantrum.

I'm a bad parent!

200

Name the (6) core processes of the ACT Hexaflex.

Defusion, Acceptance, Present Moment, Self as Context, Values, Commited Action

200

Name the participant who was 35 years old with 2 children. 

Gemma
200

Who identified behaviors to target?

Trainer and Parent

200

____ trainer(s) were assigned to each participant. 

1

200

It is called ____ when a person believes that thoughts are literal and "not just thoughts."

Cognitive fusion

300
Name the person who developed ACT.

Steven Hayes

300

Participant Hannah's son was named...

Sam

300

Sarah valued "child autonomy." Give an example.

Child going to different isles in a store, using a public restroom, waiting in the car, going to a friend's house, walking around the neighborhood, without supervision.

300

Name one assessment used. 

Acceptance and Action Questionnaire-II, Self-Compassion Scale, Family Impact of Childhood Disability Scale

300

In the ACT world, when a person experiences an aversive thought and attempts to behave in a way to avoid or terminate those private events, it is called_____.

Experiential avoidance

400

Describe Acceptance.

Acceptance can be conceptualized as “an approach response and/or the absence of an escape response in respect to aversive stimulation – unconditioned, conditioned, or derived”  

400

Number of participants that were single parents. 

Zero!

400

Gemma valued "quality joyful moments together as a family." Give an example.

Eating dinner together, playing together at home, going for walks in the neighborhood, having a BBQ, going to a community event.

400

The first skills training session focused on ______. 

The first skills-training session focused on establishing basic Table 2 ACT skills targeted with exercise examples for training mindfulness skills, and introduced parents to the nature and problem of “control” strategies

400
Give a guess of what kind of aversive thought a parent could be having if the behavior they engage in is chronically missing meetings with child's clinical team.

I'm not good enough, I can't do this, I'm a bad parent

500

Describe Defusion.

Defusion procedures aim to reduce cognitive fusion by disrupting the narrow, rigid functions that one's thoughts currently have and establish a broader, more flexible repertoire of responding to one's own thoughts as private stimuli

500

Sarah was ___ years old. 

52

500

Hannah valued "creating a balanced parenting partnership." Give an example. 

Husband putting child to sleep, playing with child, feeding child breakfast without supervision

500

The final session focused on____. 

The final training session focused on exercises to promote self-care, including self-compassion, and defusion. Parents also discussed and engaged in problem-solving with respect to potential barriers to the maintenance and generalization of newly acquired ACT skills. A