Category: RR Techniques

Showing 31 - 34 of 34
Multifactor Behavioral Treatment of Chronic Sle...
Authors
Gregg D. Jacobs, Paul A. Rosenberg, Richard Friedman, Jean Matheson, Guerry M. Peavy, Alice D. Domar, Herbert Benson
Journal
Behavior Modification
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Sleep latency changes following behavioral interventions for sleep-onset insomnia are only moderate because the majority of insomniacs do not achieve good sleeper status at posttreatment. This study evaluated the efficacy of a multifactor behavioral intervention consisting of stimulus control and relaxation-response training (n = 10) compared to stimulus control alone (n = 10) for sleep-onset insomnia. Only the multifactor subjects' mean posttest sleep latency fell within the good sle […]
Three Case Reports of the Metabolic and Electro...
Authors
Herbert Benson, M.D., M. S. Malhotra, M.D., Ralph F. Goldman, Ph.D., Gregg D. Jacobs, Ph.D., P. Jeffrey Hopkins, Ph.D.
Journal
Behavioral Medicine
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To examine the extent to which advanced meditative practices might alter body metabolism and the electroencephalogram (EEG), we investigated three Tibetan Buddhist monks living in the Rumtek monastery in Sikkim, India. In a study carried out in February 1988, we found that during the practice of several different meditative practices, resting metabolism ([Vdot]O2) could be both raised (up to 61%) and lowered (down to 64%). The reduction from rest is the largest ever reported. On the […]
The efficacy of progressive relaxation in syste...
Authors
Martha M. Greenwood, Herbert Benson
Journal
Behavior Research and Therapy
·
The theoretical basis of systematic desensitization is reciprocal inhibition in which an alternative, competitive response to anxiety is conditioned to arousal-producing, phobic stimuli. Abbreviated training in progressive relaxation is believed to serve as a competitive response to anxiety by decreasing autonomic nervous system activity. However, physiologic studies of progressive relaxation have not substantiated that its practice is associated with such decreased autonomic activity […]
A Simple Psychophysiologic Technique Which Elic...
Authors
John F Beary, Herbert Benson, Helen P Klemchuk
Journal
Psychosomatic Medicine
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Oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production, and respiratory rate are significantly decreased during the practice of a new, easily-learned relaxation technique. The elements of the technique are a mental device to prevent distracting thoughts, a passive attitude, decreased muscle tonus, and a quiet environment which is as free of visual and auditory stimuli as possible. Sitting quietly with the eyes either open or closed failed to produce the same changes. These physiologic changes […]