Emotional reactions are a vital part of the therapeutic relationship. The Feeling Word Checklist-24 (FWC-24) is an instrument asking the clinician (or the patient) to report to what degree he or she has experienced various feelings during a therapeutic interaction. The aim of this study was to assess the factor structure of the clinician-rated FWC-24 when taking dependencies in the data into account. The sample was deliberately heterogeneous and consisted of 4,443 ratings made by 101 psychotherapists working with different psychotherapy methods in relation to 191 patients of different ages, genders, and with different primary diagnoses. A random intercept-only model revealed large intraclass correlation coefficients at the therapist level, ...
Reviews of counseling research indicate that there are no instruments explicitly designed to assess ...
A growing number of psychotherapy researchers are studying in-session events that signify therapeuti...
Objective: Recently, studies have reported systematic relationships between the therapists’ emotiona...
Background The Feeling Word Checklist (FWC) is a self-report questionnaire designed ...
The Multiple Affect Adjective Check List (MAACL) has been found to have five first-order factors rep...
Countertransference (CT) responses during therapy sessions can be understood as the therapist’s emot...
This paper demonstrates the usefulness of O-factor analysis in studying how feelings are struc-tured...
: This article discusses the development and preliminary validation of a self-report inventory of th...
This study provides the first assessment of the latent structure of the Profile of Emotional Distres...
This paper demonstrates the usefulness of O-factor analysis in studying how feelings are structured...
BackgroundThe aim of this manuscript is to analyze the degrees of responsibility for healing that ps...
Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) have contributed to test de...
埼玉県越谷市The purpose of this study was to develop a self-report instrument of mood states consists of e...
In an empirical study of psychoanalytic processes, the authors identify therapist, patient, and inte...
The current study provides the first assessment of the latent structure of the Profile of Emotional ...
Reviews of counseling research indicate that there are no instruments explicitly designed to assess ...
A growing number of psychotherapy researchers are studying in-session events that signify therapeuti...
Objective: Recently, studies have reported systematic relationships between the therapists’ emotiona...
Background The Feeling Word Checklist (FWC) is a self-report questionnaire designed ...
The Multiple Affect Adjective Check List (MAACL) has been found to have five first-order factors rep...
Countertransference (CT) responses during therapy sessions can be understood as the therapist’s emot...
This paper demonstrates the usefulness of O-factor analysis in studying how feelings are struc-tured...
: This article discusses the development and preliminary validation of a self-report inventory of th...
This study provides the first assessment of the latent structure of the Profile of Emotional Distres...
This paper demonstrates the usefulness of O-factor analysis in studying how feelings are structured...
BackgroundThe aim of this manuscript is to analyze the degrees of responsibility for healing that ps...
Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) have contributed to test de...
埼玉県越谷市The purpose of this study was to develop a self-report instrument of mood states consists of e...
In an empirical study of psychoanalytic processes, the authors identify therapist, patient, and inte...
The current study provides the first assessment of the latent structure of the Profile of Emotional ...
Reviews of counseling research indicate that there are no instruments explicitly designed to assess ...
A growing number of psychotherapy researchers are studying in-session events that signify therapeuti...
Objective: Recently, studies have reported systematic relationships between the therapists’ emotiona...