Quiz: Managing Unhealthy Sexual Arousal: A Sex-Positive Approach to Treatment


(OT303-A) Quiz: Managing Unhealthy Sexual Arousal: A Sex-Positive Approach to Treatment

Training Title: Managing Unhealthy Sexual Arousal: A Sex-Positive Approach to Treatment
This exam contains 15 questions. In order to receive credit, you MUST answer at least 12 questions correctly. You may attempt the quiz as many times as you’d like.

1. Arousal management includes interventions that target which of the following?
2. The primary distinction between arousal management and conversion therapy is that arousal management:
3. The distinction between healthy attraction and objectification is that objectification involves:
4. A review of 61 years of published sexuality research in counseling psychology journals (Hargons et al., 2017) found that the majority of studies meeting inclusion criteria used which perspective?
5. The Gannon et al. (2019) meta-analysis found that sex offense-specific programs incorporating arousal reconditioning led to:
6. One indicator that a person may be motivated for arousal management treatment is their:
7. Participants in arousal management treatment should continuously log their sexual thoughts throughout the entire course of treatment.
8. Masturbatory satiation may not be appropriate for individuals who:
9. The “Sexual Impulse Control Training” technique, adapted from the Changing Me workbook, begins by having a participant read a fantasy until achieving what level of arousal before walking away?
10. Within the RNR model, the responsivity principle refers to:
11. A healthy fantasy used in arousal management treatment must:
12. Reading, writing, and comprehension difficulties are identified as the most common responsivity concerns in arousal management work. One recommended adaptation is:
13. Assisted covert sensitization differs from standard covert sensitization by adding an aversive smell or taste when the person reads their aversive scenario.
14. In Minimal Arousal Conditioning (MAC), participants inhale an aversive smell:
15. When using person-centered language in treatment, saying that someone has “pedophilic interests” is preferable to: