Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2078666098> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 94 of
94
with 100 items per page.
- W2078666098 endingPage "509" @default.
- W2078666098 startingPage "500" @default.
- W2078666098 abstract "In this study, 8 clients participated in interpersonal process recall interviews (N. Kagan, 1975) to review therapy sessions in which they explored problematic reactions. The reports of their recalled experience during the sessions were analyzed qualitatively by means of the grounded theory method (B. G. Glaser & A. Strauss, 1967). The analysis resulted in a model of the cognitiveaffective operations characterizing the clients' internal processes during the sessions. The model's main categories were client operations and session momentum. The 1st category subsumed the following lower order categories: symbolic representation of experience, reflexive self-examination, new realizations, and revisioning self. The 2nd category subsumed the positive and negative dimensions of the clients' experiences during the session. The theoretical and practical implications of the model are discussed. A recent development in psychotherapy process research has been the conceptualization of performance models of small episodes of therapy to identify the active ingredients of therapeutic change (Clarke, 1989; Rice & Greenberg, 1984). Rice and Saperia (1984) proposed a performance model that characterized the way in which clients resolve problematic reactions when therapists implement the technique of systematic evocative unfolding. Problematic reactions are emotional or behavioral reactions that clients feel in some way are puzzling or too extreme. For example, they might be surprised by the extent to which they feel rejected in response to casual remarks made by friends. Rice and Saperia (1984) identified four phases necessary for clients' successful resolution of problematic reactions. First, markers are identified that consist of clients' statements that they are puzzled or perplexed by their reactions to a specific situation. Second, the situations in which the clients experienced their problematic reactions are evoked through the use of concrete, vivid, and imagistic language. Third, clients identify the salient aspects of the situations that triggered their reactions and explore their affective responses or their perceptions of the stimulus situation to identify its subjective impact. Fourth, clients broaden and deepen their exploration to acquire a deeper understanding of their own mode of functioning. This last phase enables them to restructure the initial problem and gives them a sense of being able to change the situation. The method of task analysis has been used to explicate therapists' tacit knowledge of the change process and to describe clients' and therapists' performances as represented in therapy transcripts. However, the extrinsic enabling conditions, to borrow a phrase from Harre (1984), of therapeutic change have not been addressed. Consequently, clients' intrinsic enabling conditions—such as their internal operations, subjective experience, and intentionality— remain covert. A primary objective of this study was to use interpersonal process recall (IPR; Kagan, 1975) to obtain clients' reports of their subjective experiences during the exploration of problematic reactions in order to illuminate the internal cognitive-affective operations that clients engage in to resolve problematic issues and effect changes in their behavior. This model of clients' subjective experience was then compared and contrasted with the performance model (Rice & Saperia, 1984) in order to increase understanding of the change process during the change event." @default.
- W2078666098 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2078666098 creator A5017404566 @default.
- W2078666098 creator A5053465700 @default.
- W2078666098 date "1994-10-01" @default.
- W2078666098 modified "2023-10-13" @default.
- W2078666098 title "Qualitative analysis of clients' subjective experience of significant moments during the exploration of problematic reactions." @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1482707767 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1514800754 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1690050651 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1810515007 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1850907239 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1888085273 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1926671711 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1968554515 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W1986194384 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2031658097 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2040247203 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2050637383 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2051274678 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2051596629 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2068677299 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2069749567 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2083802489 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2092169329 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2092301889 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2157366837 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2224989214 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2329395632 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2802436519 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2952992539 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W2955361408 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W3016398156 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W3217545987 @default.
- W2078666098 cites W623261933 @default.
- W2078666098 doi "https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-0167.41.4.500" @default.
- W2078666098 hasPublicationYear "1994" @default.
- W2078666098 type Work @default.
- W2078666098 sameAs 2078666098 @default.
- W2078666098 citedByCount "109" @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982012 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982013 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982014 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982015 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982016 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982017 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982018 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982020 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982021 @default.
- W2078666098 countsByYear W20786660982022 @default.
- W2078666098 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2078666098 hasAuthorship W2078666098A5017404566 @default.
- W2078666098 hasAuthorship W2078666098A5053465700 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C138496976 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C190248442 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C3018587665 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C36289849 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C542102704 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C70410870 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C75630572 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConcept C77805123 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C138496976 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C144024400 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C15744967 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C190248442 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C3018587665 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C36289849 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C542102704 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C70410870 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C75630572 @default.
- W2078666098 hasConceptScore W2078666098C77805123 @default.
- W2078666098 hasIssue "4" @default.
- W2078666098 hasLocation W20786660981 @default.
- W2078666098 hasOpenAccess W2078666098 @default.
- W2078666098 hasPrimaryLocation W20786660981 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W1493468982 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W1499806064 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W2046541833 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W2057857755 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W2140472019 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W2261353938 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W2412051436 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W2898960644 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W4240869053 @default.
- W2078666098 hasRelatedWork W4316090175 @default.
- W2078666098 hasVolume "41" @default.
- W2078666098 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2078666098 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2078666098 magId "2078666098" @default.
- W2078666098 workType "article" @default.