The Seba library treats Self Monitoring in 7 passages, across 6 authors (including Miller, William R., Schore, Allan N., Yalom, Irvin D.).
In the library
7 passages
Self-monitoring 10 25 50 6 12.00 50 83 18 -3 40
This passage situates self-monitoring as a rankable treatment modality in a systematic meta-analysis of alcohol use disorder interventions, assigning it a cumulative evidence score and positioning it within the broader hierarchy of clinical efficacy.
Miller, William R., Mesa Grande: a methodological analysis of clinical trials of treatments for alcohol use disorders, 2002thesis
This potent emotion that is generated by the virtually constant monitoring of the self in relation to others is associated with a termination of an object relating mode and a reduction in the motivation to merge with others.
Schore grounds self-monitoring in the continuous, relational surveillance that generates shame, framing it as an affect-regulatory mechanism integral to autonomy, individuation, and object differentiation.
Schore, Allan N., Affect Regulation and the Origin of the Self: The Neurobiology of Emotional Development, 1994thesis
Self-monitoring group
Self-observation
Self-reflection
Self-reflective loop: crucial to therapeutic experience; in here-and-now focus
Yalom's index clusters self-monitoring alongside self-observation and the self-reflective loop, establishing its structural adjacency to the core mechanisms of here-and-now therapeutic process in group psychotherapy.
Yalom, Irvin D., The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy, Fifth Edition, 2008supporting
we can also notice the typical physical manifestations of our dominant protectors in order to keep tabs on their level of activation.
Schwartz reframes self-monitoring as somatic surveillance — the practitioner's disciplined attention to bodily signals of part-activation — embedding it within the IFS practice of maintaining Self-led awareness throughout daily life and sessions.
Schwartz, Richard C, Internal Family Systems Therapy, 1995supporting
mindfulness training may interrupt drug-use action schemas by augmenting top-down control via a frontoparietal metacognitive attention network, facilitating the strategic deployment of self-regulatory processes.
Garland situates self-monitoring within a neurocognitive framework, arguing that mindfulness training enhances metacognitive attention networks that enable strategic self-regulatory interruption of addictive automaticity.
Garland, Eric L., Mindfulness training targets neurocognitive mechanisms of addiction at the attention-appraisal-emotion interface, 2014supporting
Fidelity monitoring should be immediate and ongoing. Providers who fall below a quality performance threshold can be given feedback and a corrective action plan with close monitoring.
Miller deploys self-monitoring in a procedural, external register — as fidelity surveillance of clinician behavior — illustrating how the concept migrates from client-side introspection to therapist-side quality assurance in clinical research contexts.
Miller, William R., Motivational Interviewing: Helping People Change, Third Edition, 2013supporting
The attachment theory index references metacognitive monitoring in relation to mentalisation and borderline personality disorder, signaling conceptual kinship between self-monitoring and reflective function in the attachment literature.
Bowlby, John, John Bowlby and Attachment Theory (Makers of Modern, 2014aside