目标、任务和纽带:治疗师与客户对工作联盟认知的计算评估》。

Alexandria K Vail, Jeffrey Girard, Lauren Bylsma, Jeffrey Cohn, Jay Fournier, Holly Swartz, Louis-Philippe Morency
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摘要

客户过早退出治疗是心理治疗面临的最大挑战之一:最近的研究表明,至少有五分之一的客户会过早离开治疗。客户终止治疗的原因多种多样,但最常见的原因之一是缺乏强有力的工作联盟。工作联盟的概念体现了客户与治疗师之间的合作关系,这种合作关系旨在帮助寻求治疗的客户取得进步和康复。不幸的是,客户往往不愿意直接表达对治疗的不满,直到他们已经决定终止治疗。另一方面,治疗师可能会在治疗过程中错过客户不满的细微迹象,否则就为时已晚。在这项研究中,我们证明了非语言行为分析可以帮助弥合这一差距。本研究主要关注求助者和治疗师的头部手势,并将其与心理治疗过程中双方的轮流对话行为结合起来。我们发现了暗示个人对工作联盟看法的多种行为模式;有趣的是,这些模式在求助者和治疗师之间也存在差异。这些模式为工作联盟自我报告评级预测模型的开发提供了信息,该模型对求助者和治疗师的评级都具有显著的预测能力。这种模型在未来的应用可能会刺激先发制人的干预,以加强薄弱的工作联盟,无论是明确尝试修复现有的联盟,还是建立更合适的客户-治疗师配对,以确保客户在接受他们需要的治疗时遇到更少的障碍。
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Goals, Tasks, and Bonds: Toward the Computational Assessment of Therapist Versus Client Perception of Working Alliance.

Early client dropout is one of the most significant challenges facing psychotherapy: recent studies suggest that at least one in five clients will leave treatment prematurely. Clients may terminate therapy for various reasons, but one of the most common causes is the lack of a strong working alliance. The concept of working alliance captures the collaborative relationship between a client and their therapist when working toward the progress and recovery of the client seeking treatment. Unfortunately, clients are often unwilling to directly express dissatisfaction in care until they have already decided to terminate therapy. On the other side, therapists may miss subtle signs of client discontent during treatment before it is too late. In this work, we demonstrate that nonverbal behavior analysis may aid in bridging this gap. The present study focuses primarily on the head gestures of both the client and therapist, contextualized within conversational turn-taking actions between the pair during psychotherapy sessions. We identify multiple behavior patterns suggestive of an individual's perspective on the working alliance; interestingly, these patterns also differ between the client and the therapist. These patterns inform the development of predictive models for self-reported ratings of working alliance, which demonstrate significant predictive power for both client and therapist ratings. Future applications of such models may stimulate preemptive intervention to strengthen a weak working alliance, whether explicitly attempting to repair the existing alliance or establishing a more suitable client-therapist pairing, to ensure that clients encounter fewer barriers to receiving the treatment they need.

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