Simon B Goldberg, Michael Tanana, Shaakira Haywood Stewart, Camille Y Williams, Christina S Soma, David C Atkins, Zac E Imel, Jesse Owen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Recent scholarship has highlighted the value of therapists adopting a multicultural orientation (MCO) within psychotherapy. A newly developed performance-based measure of MCO capacities exists (MCO-performance task [MCO-PT]) in which therapists respond to video-based vignettes of clients sharing culturally relevant information in therapy. The MCO-PT provides scores related to the three aspects of MCO: cultural humility (i.e., adoption of a nonsuperior and other-oriented stance toward clients), cultural opportunities (i.e., seizing or making moments in session to ask about clients' cultural identities), and cultural comfort (i.e., therapists' comfort in cultural conversations). Although a promising measure, the MCO-PT relies on labor-intensive human coding. The present study evaluated the ability to automate the scoring of the MCO-PT transcripts using modern machine learning and natural language processing methods. We included a sample of 100 participants (n = 613 MCO-PT responses). Results indicated that machine learning models were able to achieve near-human reliability on the average across all domains (Spearman's ρ = .75, p < .0001) and opportunity (ρ = .81, p < .0001). Performance was less robust for cultural humility (ρ = .46, p < .001) and was poorest for cultural comfort (ρ = .41, p < .001). This suggests that we may be on the cusp of being able to develop machine learning-based training paradigms that could allow therapists opportunities for feedback and deliberate practice of some key therapist behaviors, including aspects of MCO. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Psychotherapy Theory, Research, Practice, Training publishes a wide variety of articles relevant to the field of psychotherapy. The journal strives to foster interactions among individuals involved with training, practice theory, and research since all areas are essential to psychotherapy. This journal is an invaluable resource for practicing clinical and counseling psychologists, social workers, and mental health professionals.