排序方式: 共有70条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
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Elizabeth Piazza-Bonin Robert A. Neimeyer Daniela Alves Melissa Smigelsky Elizabeth Crunk 《Journal of constructivist psychology》2016,29(3):269-297
This project entailed an intensive qualitative analysis of six-session psychotherapies conducted by three eminent humanistic psychotherapists working with bereaved clients. The Innovative Moments Coding System (IMCS), rooted in narrative therapy, is designed to measure change across therapy orientations. Research using the IMCS suggests that the psychotherapy change process occurs through the emergence, elaboration, and expansion of identifiable change moments for a client—innovative moments (IMs)—which present as exceptions to a client's presenting problematic narrative. There are five identified types of IMs: action, reflection, protest, reconceptualization (RC), and performing change (PC). The current study aimed to inform theory regarding the patterns of IMs across three humanistic approaches—constructivist, person-centered, and existential—when working with bereaved clients, while linking these patterns to observable change in each client's functioning. The alliance between each client and therapist was also assessed across the therapy process, showing consistently strong alliances across the three cases. Findings from the current study reinforce the salience of reflection, RC, and PC IMs in successful grief therapy cases, and also suggest the importance of meaning-making interventions in grief therapy. Clinical implications and suggestions for future research are also addressed. 相似文献
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Continental Philosophy Review - In this paper, I discuss the possible relations between Fritz London’s account of the status of the observer in quantum physics and transcendental... 相似文献
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Stephanie Alves Ana Fonseca Maria Cristina Canavarro Marco Pereira 《European journal of social psychology》2020,50(1):18-34
Unlike individual perceptions of a couple's functioning, couple-level protective factors against poor adjustment to the birth of a child have rarely been studied. This study examined similarity or reciprocal exchanges in dyadic coping (DC) during pregnancy (T1) and at 6 weeks postpartum (T2) and its associations with both partners’ adjustment at 6–9 months postpartum (T3). Ninety-two Portuguese couples provided data on DC, internalizing symptoms, dyadic adjustment and parenting stress. An individual's perceived similarity at T1 positively predicted his or her own internalizing symptoms at T3. One partner's perceived similarity at T2 negatively predicted the other partner's internalizing symptoms and parenting stress at T3. These associations controlled for stereotype effects (i.e., similarity due to shared cultural norms and values). Both partners’ adjustment seems to benefit from unique similarity within the couple after childbirth, while complementarity in DC during pregnancy appears to be more beneficial in the long term. Our findings suggest important refinements to DC-based interventions already aimed to promote similarity in DC. 相似文献
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