Get Out of Your Mind and Into Your Life

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by Steven C. Hayes


  Deikman, A. J. 1982. The Observing Self: Mysticism and Psychotherapy. Boston: Beacon Press.

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  Eifert, G. H., and M. Heffner. 2003. The effects of acceptance versus control contexts on avoidance of panic-related symptoms. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry 34:293-312.

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  Gifford, E. V., B. S. Kohlenberg, S. C. Hayes, D. O. Antonuccio, M. M. Piasecki, M. L. Rasmussen-Hall, et al. 2004. Acceptance theory-based treatment for smoking cessation: An initial trial of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy. Behavior Therapy 35:689-705.

  Gregg, J. 2004. Development of an acceptance-based treatment for the self-management of diabetes. Ph.D. diss., University of Nevada, Reno.

  Gutiérrez, O., C. Luciano, M. Rodríguez, and B. C. Fink. 2004. Comparison between an acceptance-based and a cognitive-control-based protocol for coping with pain. Behavior Therapy 35:767-784.

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  Hayes, S. C. 2004. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Relational Frame Theory, and the third wave of behavior therapy. Behavior Therapy 35:639-665.

  Hayes, S. C., and D. Barnes-Holmes. 2004. Relational operants: Processes and implications. A response to Palmer’s review of “Relational Frame Theory.” Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior 82:213-224.

  Hayes, S. C., D. Barnes-Holmes, and B. Roche, eds. 2001. Relational Frame Theory: A Post-Skinnerian Account of Human Language and Cognition. New York: Plenum Press.

  Hayes, S. C., R. Bissett, Z. Korn, R. D. Zettle, I. Rosenfarb, L. Cooper, et al. 1999. The impact of acceptance versus control rationales on pain tolerance. The Psychological Record 49:33-47.

  Hayes, S. C., V. M. Follette, and M. Linehan, eds. 2004. Mindfulness and Acceptance: Expanding the Cognitive Behavioral Tradition. New York: Guilford Press.

  Hayes, S. C., J. Luoma, F. Bond, A. Masuda, and J. Lillis. Forthcoming. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Model, processes, and outcomes. Behaviour Research and Therapy.

  Hayes, S. C., A. Masuda, R. Bissett, J. Luoma, and L. F. Guerrero. 2004. DBT, FAP, and ACT: How empirically oriented are the new behavior therapy technologies? Behavior Therapy 35:35-54.

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  Hayes, S. C., K. D. Strosahl, K. G. Wilson, R. T. Bissett, J. Pistorello, and D. Toarmino. 2004. Measuring experiential avoidance: A preliminary test of a working model. The Psychological Record 54:553-578.

  Hayes, S. C., K. G. Wilson, E. V. Gifford, V. M. Follette, and K. Strosahl. 1996. Emotional avoidance and behavioral disorders: A functional dimensional approach to diagnosis and treatment. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 64:1152-1168.

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  Masuda, A., S. C. Hayes, C. F. Sackett, and M. P. Twohig. 2004. Cognitive defusion and self-relevant negative thoughts: Examining the impact of a ninety year old technique. Behaviour Research and Therapy 42:477-485.

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  Strosahl, K. D., S. C. Hayes, J. Bergan, and P. Romano. 1998. Does field-based training in behavior therapy improve clinical effectiveness? Evidence from the Acceptance and Commitment Therapy training project. Behavior Therapy 29:35-64.

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  Steven C. Hayes, Ph.D., is University of Nevada Foundation Professor of Psychology at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is author of more than 350 scientific articles and twenty-seven books, including Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Relational Frame Theory—two books that significantly develop the concepts on which Get Out of Your Mind and Into Your Life is based. His research explores the nature of human language and cognition and their application to the understanding and alleviation of human suffering. In 1992, the Institute for Scientific Information reported Hayes among the highest-impact psychologists in the world during the years 1986–90 based on the citation impact of his writings. He is past-president of the Association for Advancement of Behavior Therapy, the American Association of Applied and Preventive Psychology, and Division Twenty-Five of the American Psychological Association. He was the first Secretary-Treasurer of the American Psychological Society. He is the recipient of the Don F. Hake Award for Exemplary Contributions to Basic Behavioral Research and Its Applications from Division 25 of the American Psychological Association. In 1999, US Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala appointed him to a four-year term on the National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse.

  Spencer Smith is a writer and editor based in Santa Rosa, CA. He is coauthor of The Memory Doctor.

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