The Lausanne Trilogue Play: bringing together developmental and systemic perspectives in clinical settings

IF 0.7 4区 心理学 Q4 FAMILY STUDIES Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy Pub Date : 2023-11-20 DOI:10.1002/anzf.1559
Hervé Tissot, Nicolas Favez
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Abstract

Developmentalists have demonstrated that the quality of relationships established by infants with their proximal social environment is crucial for lifecourse development. However, studies of parent–infant relationships have mostly centred on the mother–child dyad. Stemming from family systems theory that considers interactions within the whole family as critical for an individual's personal development, a group of family therapists and researchers in Lausanne (Switzerland) tried to bridge the gap between systemic and developmental thinking by stressing the need to establish the mother–father–infant triad as a collective unit of study. In response, they created the Lausanne Trilogue Play (LTP), a method to systematically assess the quality of mother–father–infant interactions. The LTP is an observational situation during which parents are asked to play with their infant in four parts: (i) one parent plays with the infant, while the other parent is ‘simply present’; (ii) the parents switch roles; (iii) all three play together; (iv) the parents discuss in front of the infant. The theoretical model underpinning the LTP is the family alliance model, which postulates that the quality of the coordination demonstrated by the triad to achieve this task can be assessed mainly through careful observation of non-verbal behaviours as indicators of the achievement of four interactive functions (i.e., participation, organisation, focalisation, affect sharing); fulfilment of these functions determines the quality of relational functioning within the system. This article introduces the clinical, theoretical, and empirical foundations of using the LTP method with the family alliance model; its use in clinical and research contexts; and the most recent advances in the field of research on mother–father–infant interactions based on the LTP situation.

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洛桑三段剧:将临床环境中的发展和系统观点结合起来
发展学家已经证明,婴儿与其近端社会环境建立的关系质量对其一生的发展至关重要。然而,对亲子关系的研究主要集中在母子双方。家庭系统理论认为,整个家庭内部的相互作用对个人的个人发展至关重要,来自瑞士洛桑的一组家庭治疗师和研究人员试图通过强调建立母亲-父亲-婴儿三位一体作为一个集体研究单位的必要性,弥合系统思维和发展思维之间的差距。作为回应,他们创造了洛桑三部曲游戏(LTP),这是一种系统评估母亲-父亲-婴儿互动质量的方法。LTP是一种观察性的情境,在此期间,父母被要求与他们的婴儿玩耍,分为四个部分:(i)父母一方与婴儿玩耍,而另一方“只是在场”;(ii)父母角色互换;(iii)三者一起玩耍;(四)父母当着婴儿的面讨论。支持LTP的理论模型是家庭联盟模型,该模型假设,通过仔细观察非语言行为作为实现四种互动功能(即参与、组织、集中、影响共享)的指标,可以主要评估三元人格为完成这一任务所表现出的协调质量;这些功能的实现决定了系统内关系功能的质量。本文介绍了LTP方法与家庭联盟模式结合的临床、理论和实证基础;它在临床和研究环境中的应用;以及基于LTP情境的母婴互动研究领域的最新进展。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
14.30%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: The ANZJFT is reputed to be the most-stolen professional journal in Australia! It is read by clinicians as well as by academics, and each issue includes substantial papers reflecting original perspectives on theory and practice. A lively magazine section keeps its finger on the pulse of family therapy in Australia and New Zealand via local correspondents, and four Foreign Correspondents report on developments in the US and Europe.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Adult relationship ruptures, positive psychology, cultural sensitivity, disability culture, child–parent relationship therapy and interviewing Monica McGoldrick Genograms, culture, love and sisterhood: A conversation with Monica McGoldrick Envisaging a thriving future: The integration of positive psychology into brief psychotherapy and family therapy practice Working with adult families of origin: On the nature of rupture and repair
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