2018
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2018.00021
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Self-Active Relaxation Therapy (SART) and Self-Regulation: A Comprehensive Review and Comparison of the Japanese Body Movement Approach

Abstract: Relaxation programs are known for their versatility, cost-effectiveness, and ability to help people obtain skills to regulate their mental states and promote and maintain health. Self-Active Relaxation Therapy (SART) is a body-oriented approach to psychological rehabilitation that grew out of the suite of movement tasks developed in the Japanese psychotherapy known as Dohsa-hou, or the body movement method. The program for SART is designed to stretch, twist, and release areas of the upper, lower, and whole bod… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Dohsahou facilitates behavioral change through the execution of body movements and associated changes in feeling states of the body from the experience of relaxation and body-mediated communication with the therapist. Similar to other contemplative and mind-body approaches that aim to enhance awareness about the self, the body, mood states, and decentering, Dohsa-hou increases awareness about the body through attention to bodily sensations and processes thought to confer motor resonance 10) . The "Dohsa process" is designed to enhance a sense of agency over the body and is described as a psychological activity that leverages intentional processes to move.…”
Section: Viewpoint On Improvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Dohsahou facilitates behavioral change through the execution of body movements and associated changes in feeling states of the body from the experience of relaxation and body-mediated communication with the therapist. Similar to other contemplative and mind-body approaches that aim to enhance awareness about the self, the body, mood states, and decentering, Dohsa-hou increases awareness about the body through attention to bodily sensations and processes thought to confer motor resonance 10) . The "Dohsa process" is designed to enhance a sense of agency over the body and is described as a psychological activity that leverages intentional processes to move.…”
Section: Viewpoint On Improvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Comparably, self-regulation involves the capacity to exercise control, manage health outcomes, and facilitate adaptive behavior. Together, the theory and practice of Dohsa-hou body movements and self-regulation overlap in the domain of motor control over body movements and health-related constructs for managing bodily signals and internal states 10) .…”
Section: Viewpoint On Improvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dohsa-hou was originally developed in Japan in 1966 by Gosaku Naruse from studies on the use of hypnosis to improve motor difficulties in children with cerebral palsy (Naruse, 1973). Naruse formulated the clinical observations of change into an underlying theory for Dohsa-hou, in which a coherence between the psychological and physiological process of movement is achieved when the client intends to move a body part, strives toward that goal, and realizes the movement they intended (Naruse, 1988, 1997; Kabir et al, 2018). Similar to other contemplative and bodymind approaches that target improvements in body movements, self-consciousness, mood, and decentering, Dohsa-hou increases awareness about the body through attention to bodily sensations and processes thought to confer motor resonance (Konno and Ohno, 1987; Dadkhah, 1998; Shirouzu and Koshikawa, 2011; Chervenkova, 2017; Kabir et al, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Comparably, self-regulation involves the capacity to exercise control and guide reactions, which are abilities essential to managing health outcomes and facilitating adaptive behavior. In this manner, the theory and practice of Dohsa-hou body movements and self-regulation overlap in the domain of motor control over body movements and health-related constructs for managing bodily signals and internal states (Chervenkova, 2017; Kabir et al, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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