The evolution of communicative intentions during change episodes and throughout the therapeutic process
Date
2012
Type:
Article
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Abstract
The present study examines the heterogeneity of the therapeutic process through the analysis of the conversation between therapists and clients in psychotherapy. The Communicative Intentions dimension of the Therapeutic Activity Coding System (TACS) was applied to 69 change episodes taken from 100 sessions that belong to five brief psychotherapies. Depending on what the participants are trying to achieve with their communication, the TACS distinguishes three types of Communicative Intentions: Exploring, Attuning, and Resignifying. Client and therapist verbalizations corresponding to these categories were analysed searching for differences between (a) both speakers, (b) initial, middle and final change episode stages, and (c) initial, middle and final phases of the whole therapeutic process. Results indicate that, in general, therapists resignify and attune more frequently, while clients explore more often. The analysis of Communicative Intentions within change episodes and during the whole therapeutic process reveals that there is an evolution in both: Even small therapy segments, as change episodes are, show that the process is not homogeneous, since in initial stages, the use of Exploring is more frequent than the use of Resignifying, especially for clients, while during the end of the episode clients and therapists increase their use of Resignifying. The analysis of the whole process confirms that Resignifying surpasses the use of Exploring in the final phases of therapy.
Description
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Citation
Research in Psychotherapy: Psychopathology, Process and Outcome, 2012; 15 (2): 75–86
Keywords
Therapeutic verbal communication, Communicative actions, Change episodes, Therapeutic process