Ikizer, Gozde/0000-0003-3567-5991;ObjectiveAlthough there is notable evidence supporting the importance of the therapeutic alliance and therapist presence in psychotherapy practice, the question of how these factors interact dynamically over time remains to be answered. This study investigated how therapists adjust their presence in response to client distress and how this responsive pattern is moderated by therapeutic alliance during the beginning phase of psychotherapy.MethodPre-session symptom measurements and post-session ratings of therapist presence and alliance were collected across the first five consecutive sessions from 46 clients and 22 novice therapists, allowing examination of temporal sequences in therapeutic processes.ResultsTherapists' presence increased in response to higher pre-session symptom levels, with this responsive pattern evolving over time. This relationship was moderated by therapeutic alliance, with stronger alliance providing a context that attenuated the presence-symptom association. Notably, therapist ratings showed stronger predictive relationships with outcomes than client ratings, possibly reflecting the unique observational capacity of therapists in their earliest professional encounters.ConclusionThese findings demonstrated how therapist presence operates as a dynamic, responsive intervention rather than a static therapeutic factor, suggesting that alliance functions as a contextual moderator rather than merely a direct predictor of outcome.The Scientific and Technological Research Council of TurkiyeThe data preparation and analysis process were conducted through interactive consultation with Claude (Anthropic, 2024), a large language model, to enhance methodological rigour and analytical accuracy
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