128 research outputs found
Reflective-verbal language and reverie in a qualitative interview
In contrast to dominant approaches to therapy research that look at outcomes and focus on large samples, another primary strand of research considers microphenomenal processes and focuses on small samples. This study contributes to the latter genre in regard to the implicit impact of language. Aim: This study aims to apply relational psychotherapeutic thinking about empathic dialogue, specifically the concepts of reflective-verbal language and reverie, to qualitative interviewing. Methodology: An example from a small-scale study about emotionally evocative language is reviewed in detail, focusing on the interviewer’s phenomenological experience of her conversation with a participant in a qualitative interview. Findings: The authors argue that the interviewer’s reflexive awareness of her reveries and the reflective verbal nature of the research dialogue gave her an alternative perspective on the participant’s (and her own) experience. Implications: The study highlights the value within research and practice of maintaining awareness of language at a microphenomenal level, using techniques based on the principles of psychological therapy
Psicoanalisi e prospettive evoluzionistiche dell'attaccamento: un progetto di prevenzione per la tutela della salute mentale perinatale
Prologue: In Honor of Louis Sander’s Contributions to Psychoanalytic Theory, Practice, and Research
Bridging the Gap between Clinical Practice and Research Part I: Findings of a Pilot Study on Daniel Stern's ‘Moments of Meeting’ from the UKCP's Practitioner Research Network
Self-Coherence and Mutuality in the Analytic Dyad: Commentary on Michael Shoshani (Rosenbaum's) Dare to be Human
Focusing the lens: The infant's point of view. Discussion of “Brief interventions with parents, infants, and young children: A Framework for thinking”
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