Publications by authors named "Hilary Aime"

Background: Autistic individuals often experience difficulties in social settings. Although autistic individuals may not intuitively know the "typical" way to behave in social settings, many autistic individuals have a desire to fit in so they develop techniques to "camouflage" their autistic traits. Although camouflaging may help individuals to navigate social environments, camouflaging has also been shown to produce negative psychological outcomes.

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Humans are unique in their propensity for helping. Not only do we help others in need by reacting to their requests, we also help proactively by assisting in the absence of a request. Proactive helping requires the actor to detect the need for help, recognize the intention of the other, and remedy the situation.

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The therapeutic alliance has proven to be an important construct in psychotherapy outcomes research for numerous psychiatric disorders. Given that dropout rates from treatment are especially high for individuals with eating disorders, it is critical to clarify the role that the therapeutic alliance plays in predicting treatment outcomes for this specific population. MEDLINE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO databases were systematically reviewed for studies that formally measured the therapeutic alliance construct and at least one other treatment variable in the context of eating disorder treatment.

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