Feelings are Not Facts: Neurocognitive Mechanisms and Advanced Clinical Interventions for Thought-Emotion Fusion

This advanced clinical training examines the neurocognitive mechanisms that cause thoughts to feel experientially “real” and explores evidence-informed interventions to reduce cognitive fusion, emotional amplification, and maladaptive belief consolidation. Drawing from cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), metacognitive therapy (MCT), trauma-informed approaches, and affective neuroscience, this course provides clinicians with practical frameworks and structured interventions for working with clients whose distress is driven not by events, but by the perceived truth-value of internal cognitions.

Participants will learn how prediction processing, emotional tagging, attentional bias, and repetition-based familiarity contribute to the subjective realism of thoughts, and how to clinically intervene at cognitive, attentional, and somatic levels.

This course will award 2 continuing education hours.

Please see the board approval box for course approvals.