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In discussing emotion in psychotherapy, it is important to recognise that not all emotions serve the same function both in and out of therapy and that therapists need to intervene differentially with different types of emotional processes. Therapists do not simply help clients regulate all emotions or become aware of or express all feelings. Rather, they distinguish clinically among different types of emotions to guide their interventions. Problems of overregulation are discriminated from problems of underregulation, and emotions that are a sign of distress are distinguished from emotions that are a sign of working through distress. Therapists intervene differentially with clients depending on their assessment of the in-session emotional state, helping them to accept and integrate certa...
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While there has been some controversy in the past over the utility of the emotional intelligence construct, whether measured as a performance-based ability (e.g., Roberts, Zeidner, & Matthews, 2001) or as linked to personality traits (e.g., Petrides & Furnham, 2000), it remains of interest in the scholarly community. Researchers have continued to strengthen the psychometric properties of the currently available measures, and studies using the construct continue to be prevalent (e.g., Austin, Saklofske, Huang & McKenney, 2004; Mayer, Salovey, Caruso, & Sitarenios, 2003). According to Salovey and [Mayer, J. D] (1990), emotional intelligence includes an "ability to monitor one's own and others' feelings and emotions, to discriminate among them and to use this information to...
... approaches to cognitivebehavioural therapy emphasize the modification of self-talk or maladap...
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... effects." However, confusion of process (therapy) and outcome (enhanced well-being) is problematic....
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.... (41) Winick, supra note 4 at 1069. In therapy, the process of transference has to do with a pati...
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Un grand nombre d'études s'appuyant sur la TAD ont cherché à définir, aux États-Unis et dans d'autres pays, la relation entre une attitude parentale favorisant l'autonomie chez les enfants et la motivation de ceux-ci, leur santé mentale, leur niveau d'apprentissage et leur rendement scolaire. Ces études ont dans l'ensemble fait ressortir le rôle crucial que joue le soutien des parents pour que les besoins psychologiques fondamentaux de l'enfant soient comblés et qu'il puisse ainsi croître et s'adapter le mieux possible. Par exemple, [Ryan, Grolnick] et Ryan (1989) ont effectué des entrevues à la maison avec des parents d'élèves de la troisième à la sixième année. [Les] pères et les mères ont été interrogés séparément. On leur a demandé de décrire leur façon de faire avec leurs enfants p...
... patients' adherence to their antiviral therapy. Williams, McGregor, Zeldman, Freedman, and Deci (... autonomy support, forms of selfregulation, and persistence: A prospective study. Motivation ...
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L'application de la théorie de l'autodétermination au domaine de la psychothérapie est particulièrement pertinente, car l'un des principaux rôles de la thérapie est d'encourager le client à être autonome dans l'exploration, la définition, l'initiation et le maintien du processus de changement. Dans le présent article, nous nous penchons sur le travail expérimental, les études sur le terrain et les essais cliniques qui illustrent l'application de la théorie de l'autodétermination à la psychothérapie. Les études ont révélé l'importance de l'autonomie du client dans l'acquisition et le maintien des bienfaits du traitement. De plus, les expérimentations suggèrent que le soutien du thérapeute en matière d'acquisition d'autonomie augmente les chances de réussite du traitement et favorise le m...
...Basing therapy in a comprehensive, evidencebased theory is especi...
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Fourth, a basic assumption in relationships research is that one of the unique characteristics of close personal relationships is partners' capacity to influence each others' thoughts, feelings and behaviours (Kashy, Campbell & Harris, 2006). Thus, to measure relational processes we need to design studies that capture the dynamic between partners - examining the dyad over time. Beyond showing how reciprocal need support impacts personal and relational functioning, as we have discussed in this paper ([Jennifer G. La Guardia], 2007b; La Guardia et al., 2007; Patrick, 2007; Patrick et al., 2006), one interesting new development in the SDT literature has been to understand how partners affect the expression of needs. For example, Moller, Deci, and Elliot (2007) found that the fulfillmen...
... focus for individual and couples therapy and may instantiate deeper, more sustaining intera...