Emotional arousal, client perceptual processing, and the working alliance in experiential psychotherapy for depression.
Adult
Male
Ontario
Depressive Disorder
Psychology, Clinical
05 social sciences
Professional-Patient Relations
Middle Aged
Self Concept
3. Good health
Conflict, Psychological
Expressed Emotion
Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
Interview, Psychological
Humans
Psychotherapy, Brief
Regression Analysis
Female
Interpersonal Relations
Perception
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Arousal
DOI:
10.1037/0022-006x.73.5.861
Publication Date:
2005-11-15T15:45:44Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Early-, middle-, and late-phase client emotional arousal, perceptual processing strategies, and working alliance were examined in relation to treatment outcome on 4 measures in 32 clients who previously underwent experiential therapy for depression. Hierarchical regression analyses relating these variables to outcome indicated that results varied depending on the therapeutic process, phase of treatment, and outcome measure involved in the analyses. Mid-therapy arousal predicted improvements in self-esteem, whereas mid- and late treatment perceptual processing predicted reductions in client interpersonal dysfunction. Emotional arousal in conjunction with perceptual processing during mid-therapy predicted reductions in depressive and psychopathological symptomatology better than either of these variables alone. The implications of these findings for psychotherapy research and practice are discussed.
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