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Personalized versus standard role plays in the assessment of depressed patients' social skill
Authors:Emil J. Chiauzzi  Richard G. Heimberg  Robert E. Becker  David Gansler
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychiatry, Albany Medical College, 12206 Albany, New York;(2) Present address: Stonington Institute, Box 216, 06359 North Stonington, Connecticut;(3) Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Albany, 12203 Albany, New York;(4) Department of Psychiatry, Medical College of Pennsylvania at EPP1, 3200 Henry Avenue, 19129 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Abstract:Chronically depressed outpatients participated in a study of the role-play assessment of social skill. Patients role-played a series of standard situations typical of those employed in social-skills research and additional scenes drawn from critical situations in their personal lives. These “personalized” role-play situations were perceived as more relevant by patients and resulted in more discomfort and less skillful interpersonal behavior than standard scenes. Behavioral measures derived from personalized role plays were also found to be more strongly related to measures of depression than the same measures derived from the standard role-play scenes. Implications of these findings for the role-play assessment of social skill are discussed.
Keywords:depression  social skills  role playing
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