Schemas as Memories: Implications for Treatment

Schemas are usually viewed as core dysfunctional beliefs, lying dormant until activated by a salient trigger (i.e., the diathesis-stress model). It is suggested that they are long-standing, stable themes that are specific to the individual. They are formed during childhood in an attempt by the perso...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of cognitive psychotherapy Vol. 21; no. 1; pp. 51 - 57
Main Authors James, Ian A., Reichelt, F. Katharina, Freeston, Mark H., Barton, Stephen B.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer Publishing Company 01.03.2007
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Schemas are usually viewed as core dysfunctional beliefs, lying dormant until activated by a salient trigger (i.e., the diathesis-stress model). It is suggested that they are long-standing, stable themes that are specific to the individual. They are formed during childhood in an attempt by the person to cope with life events and environmental situations. Once schemas are active, they become the engine room of negative automatic thoughts and serve to bias information negatively. This prototypical description has a number of implications. Indeed, it clearly suggests that schemas are stored units of information that can be activated at some future time under the "appropriate" cueing conditions-in other words, they are memories. Developing this perspective, this article argues that therapists should have a broader concept of the nature of schemas and, rather than viewing them solely as cognitions, therapists should view them as stored multisensory representations. As such, schemas can be adequately described as representations of past experiences that are composed of cognitions and sensory features (olfactory, tactile, taste, etc.) that are both stored and retrieved as coherent units. Hence, when treating someone with depression, in addition to assessing the cognitions, one should determine whether there are sounds, tastes, body postures, and/or other sensory features associated with the patient's experience of his/her depression. If such features are found to be present, they need to be assessed appropriately and duly targeted with suitable intervention strategies.
ISSN:0889-8391
1938-887X
DOI:10.1891/088983907780493296