Rational behavior therapy
Rational behavior therapy is a form of cognitive behavioral therapy developed by psychiatrist Maxie Clarence Maultsby Jr., a professor at the Medical College at Howard University. RBT is designed to be a short term therapy which is based on discovering an unsuspected problem which creates unwanted mental, emotional and physical behaviors.
According to Maultsby, RBT addresses all three groups of learned behaviors directly: the cognitive, the emotive, and the physical. It also involves systematic guidance in the technique of emotional self-help called rational self-counseling. One of the features of rational behavior therapy is that the therapist assigns the client "therapeutic homework".
In Dr. Maultsby's book, Rational Behavior Therapy, he discusses the nine scientific approaches that are the foundation to this method:
- The art and science of practicing family medicine.
- Specialty training in adult and child psychiatry.
- Neuropsychological theories of Donald Hebb and Alexander Luria.
- Classical conditioning theory of Ivan Pavlov.
- The operant learning theory of James G. Holland and B.F. Skinner.
- Learning theories of Hobart Mowerer and Julian Rotter.
- Conditioning and learning research of Clarence V. Hudgins, Mary Cover Jones, John I. Lacey, Robert L. Smith, Charles E. Osgood and George J. Such, Gregory H.S. Razran, Arthur W. Staats and Carolyn K. Staats, John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner, Joseph Wolpe, and Arnold Lazarus.
- Psychosomatic research of David T. Graham and William J. Grace.
- Albert Ellis's theory and technique of Rational Emotive Therapy.