In the present study, 14 psychotherapy clients were interviewed about their recollections, assisted by tape replay, of an immediately preceding therapy session. A major category derived from a grounded theory analysis of the interview protocols was client's deference to the therapist, constituted of 8 lower level categories: concern about the therapist's approach, fear of criticizing the therapist, understanding the therapist's frame of reference, meeting the perceived expectations of the therapist, accepting the therapist's limitations, client's metacommunication, threatening the therapist's self-esteem, and indebtedness to the therapist. The P. Brown and S. Levinson (1987) model of politeness in discourse bot...
This article complements the narrative research that focuses on the process and content of what is s...
Nonverbal communication between a psychotherapist and a mental health consumer is an extremely power...
Abstract: A review of the analogue literature about therapist self-disclosure suggests that nonclien...
Psychotherapists' statements may be conceptualized and described in different ways, depending on whi...
Objective: We explored the interactive process in which therapists respond to client self-critical p...
Asking clients about shifts in their moment-to-moment experience - for example, when they laugh, smi...
Capturing and studying the moments in psychotherapy that clients find most important can help us und...
In psychotherapy, the norm and expectation is for clients to self-disclose, thus disregarding and di...
Sixty-eight psychotherapists of various theoretical orientations expressed their expectations of usi...
This study sought to shed light on the complexities of psychotherapy by directly examining psychothe...
In psychotherapy, therapist and patient influence each other constantly. We aimed to investigate how...
The topic of client experience of counselling as described from the perspective of the client has be...
Psychotherapy feedback instruments, commonly called “outcome measures,” have been implemented pervas...
The primary means for psychotherapy interaction is language. Since talk-in-interaction is accomplish...
Aims: This study aimed to explore clients’ experience of therapy. In particular how preconceptions c...
This article complements the narrative research that focuses on the process and content of what is s...
Nonverbal communication between a psychotherapist and a mental health consumer is an extremely power...
Abstract: A review of the analogue literature about therapist self-disclosure suggests that nonclien...
Psychotherapists' statements may be conceptualized and described in different ways, depending on whi...
Objective: We explored the interactive process in which therapists respond to client self-critical p...
Asking clients about shifts in their moment-to-moment experience - for example, when they laugh, smi...
Capturing and studying the moments in psychotherapy that clients find most important can help us und...
In psychotherapy, the norm and expectation is for clients to self-disclose, thus disregarding and di...
Sixty-eight psychotherapists of various theoretical orientations expressed their expectations of usi...
This study sought to shed light on the complexities of psychotherapy by directly examining psychothe...
In psychotherapy, therapist and patient influence each other constantly. We aimed to investigate how...
The topic of client experience of counselling as described from the perspective of the client has be...
Psychotherapy feedback instruments, commonly called “outcome measures,” have been implemented pervas...
The primary means for psychotherapy interaction is language. Since talk-in-interaction is accomplish...
Aims: This study aimed to explore clients’ experience of therapy. In particular how preconceptions c...
This article complements the narrative research that focuses on the process and content of what is s...
Nonverbal communication between a psychotherapist and a mental health consumer is an extremely power...
Abstract: A review of the analogue literature about therapist self-disclosure suggests that nonclien...