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2. Relational Self Psychology: Could There Be Any Other Kind? A Discussion of Magid, Fosshage & Shane's Paper, The Emerging Paradigm of Relational Self Psychology: A Historical Perspective.
- Author
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Guss Teicholz, Judy
- Subjects
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SELF , *PSYCHOLOGICAL literature , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper I discuss Magid, Fosshage and Shane's impressive overview of the contributions to Relational Self Psychology in the psychoanalytic literature, contributions they see as having emerged for the most part after Kohut's death and therefore as having been carried out almost entirely by Kohut's followers. But while the authors see Kohut's work as having hewed closely to a one-person psychology, I use my discussion to highlight what I see as the two-person themes in Kohut's own writings, suggesting that he may have been more relational in his thinking than initially meets the eye. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A Discussion of Darren Haber's Paper: Through The Lens of Intersubjective Self Psychology.
- Author
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Paul, Harry
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGY , *TREATMENT of addictions , *SELF , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *INTERSUBJECTIVITY - Abstract
Two principal resources will be used to discuss Darren Haber's paper Simulated Selfhood, Authentic Dialogue: An Intersubjective Systems Look at Treating Addiction. They are Intersubjective Self Psychology: A Primer and Narcissus in Wonderland: The Self Psychology of Addiction and its Treatment. Both of these resources provide a different and more complete way of understanding this excellent case presentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Self Psychology in a Pluralistic World: A Position Paper.
- Author
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Gossmann, Martin
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY , *SELF , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *NARCISSISTIC personality disorder , *STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) , *NARCISSISM - Abstract
In this article the author outlines his understanding of self-psychology as an independent psychoanalytic treatment paradigm created by the late Heinz Kohut and initially geared toward the psychoanalytic treatment of narcissistic disorders. Since then, self-psychology theory and practice have been enriched by new theoretical and clinical considerations and have been introduced into other forms of psychotherapy, counseling, and education, for example. One important conceptual contribution to developmental theory was Heinz Kohut's differentiation of separate narcissistic and "object love" related developmental tasks. Today, new paradigms as i.e. relational analysis stress the value of human relationships and of the value of mutual recognition. This warrants a revisiting of the clinical value of the self-psychological understanding of narcissism. According to the author it lies in the nature of unattended narcissistic needs that when unattended they take primacy over relational aspects and demand adequate attention in order to open up the space for mutuality, reciprocity et cetera. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Discussion of “Emmy Grant: Immigration as Repetition of Trauma and as Potential Space”: Commentary on Paper by Veronica Csillag.
- Author
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Tummala-Narra, Pratyusha
- Subjects
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REPETITION (Philosophy) , *EMIGRATION & immigration & psychology , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *LIFE , *GROUP identity , *PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
This commentary is a response to Veronica Csillag’s exploration of the influence of historical and transgenerational trauma on the lives of immigrants, and on the psychoanalytic process (this issue). Dr. Csillag’s paper deepens our understanding of the intrapsychic life of immigrants who have suffered collective trauma pre-migration and continue to suffer from “ghosts” from the past. Her ideas are critical to examining not only the specific traumas incurred in Europe related to the Nazi Holocaust and totalitarian and socialist regimes but also to contemporary traumas related to social identity and position in the United States. In this commentary, I elaborate three primary areas within Dr. Csillag’s contribution: (a) the illusion of choice in traumatic migration, (b) secrecy and privacy, and (c) experience of the outsider and the insider. My discussion underscores the importance of engaging with historical and ongoing trauma in psychoanalytic psychotherapy as a path to healing within individual and collective dimensions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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6. Digitally mediated psychotherapy: Intimacy, distance, and connection in virtual therapeutic spaces.
- Author
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Tucker, Ian
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,DIGITAL technology ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Psychotherapy & Counselling is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. ‘This is real now because it’s a piece of paper’: texts, disability, and LGBTQ parents.
- Author
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Gibson, Margaret F.
- Subjects
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PARENTS of children with disabilities , *GAY parents , *SERVICES for people with disabilities , *MEDICAL care , *DOCUMENTATION , *PARENTS , *HUMAN services , *ADOPTION , *BIRTH certificates , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *HEALTH services accessibility , *INTERVIEWING , *MEDICAL records , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *LGBTQ+ people , *SOCIAL attitudes , *PARENT attitudes , *ATTITUDES toward sex , *PSYCHOLOGY ,MEDICAL care for people with disabilities - Abstract
What role do texts play in LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) parents’ experiences of disability service systems? In interviews with 15 LGBTQ parents of disabled children in Toronto, Canada, participants selected documents to be used as a focus for discussion. Parents considered how LGBTQ identity and other intersectional identities influenced their experiences of institutional texts including adoption certificates, intake forms, and assessments. Findings suggest that documentation practices can operate as forms of systemic gatekeeping. LGBTQ identity was sometimes very significant in parents’ accounts, and sometimes less central than other aspects of their families' identities and experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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8. Agreement between touch-screen and paper-based patient-reported outcomes for patients with fibromyalgia: a randomized cross-over reproducibility study.
- Author
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Wæhrens, EE, Amris, K, Bartels, EM, Christensen, R, Danneskiold-Samsøe, B, Bliddal, H, and Gudbergsen, H
- Subjects
FIBROMYALGIA ,QUALITY of life ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,CHRONIC pain ,GENERALIZED anxiety disorder ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,PATIENTS ,MENTAL health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTERS ,CROSSOVER trials ,HEALTH status indicators ,HEALTH surveys ,INDUSTRIES ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PATIENT satisfaction ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SELF-evaluation ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,COPING Strategies Questionnaire ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objectives: To compare data based on computerized and paper versions of health status questionnaires (HSQs) for sampling patient-reported outcomes (PROs) in patients with fibromyalgia (FM). In addition, to examine associations between patient characteristics (age, education, computer experience) and differences between versions. Finally, to evaluate the acceptability of computer-based questionnaires among patients with FM.Method: The study population comprised female patients diagnosed with FM. All patients completed six HSQs: the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ), the Major Depression Inventory (MDI), the 36-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-36), the painDETECT questionnaire (PDQ), the Coping Strategies Questionnaire (CSQ), and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Self-Assessment Questionnaire (GAD-10), both on paper and using a touch screen. One HSQ was tested at a time in a repeated randomized cross-over design. The two versions were completed with a 5-min interval and between each HSQ the participants had a 5-min break. Means, mean differences with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), medians, median differences, and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) were calculated for all HSQs, including relevant subscales. Associations between patient characteristics and differences between versions were explored using Spearman's correlation coefficients.Results: Twenty women, mean age 48.4 years, participated in the study. Except for one item, ICCs between touch-screen and paper versions of the HSQs examined indicated acceptable agreement (ICC = 0.71-0.99). Overall, mean and median differences revealed no differences between versions. No significant associations were observed for patient characteristics. None of the participants preferred paper questionnaires over computerized versions.Conclusions: The computerized HSQs using a touch screen gave comparable results to answers given on paper and were generally preferred by the participants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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9. The intersection of self-determination theory and workplace spirituality: an innovative framework for advancing social work administration.
- Author
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Susmerano, Exxon B.
- Subjects
EMPLOYEE psychology ,SOCIAL service associations ,CORPORATE culture ,SOCIAL workers ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SOCIAL services ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL case work ,JOB satisfaction ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SOCIAL work research ,SPIRITUALITY ,THEORY ,HEALTH promotion ,WELL-being - Abstract
This conceptual article aims to explore how self-determination theory can be utilized in integrating workplace spirituality in social work administration to help address issues such as those related to employee well-being, job satisfaction, and motivation. The paper examines the interconnection between self-determination theory, workplace spirituality, and social work administration through a review of pertinent literature on these interrelated concepts. The complementation of self-determination theory and workplace spirituality in the realm of administration hopes to create a spiritually sensitive environment that boosts self-determination and promotes the well-being of social workers for them to become healthy and productive members of human service organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Thinking Through Affect and Psychoanalysis: Introducing Papers from the Conference “Worldings, Tensions, Futures”.
- Author
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Gentile, Katie and Baraitser, Lisa
- Subjects
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PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PSYCHOLOGY , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
This is an introduction to the panel of papers collected from the affect theory conference “Worldings, Tensions, Futures,” comprising the stream focusing on psychoanalysis, affect and time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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11. The use of immersive simulation in paramedicine education: a scoping review.
- Author
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Birtill, Michael, King, James, Jones, Donovan, Thyer, Liz, Pap, Robin, and Simpson, Paul
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AUGMENTED reality ,MIXED reality ,VIRTUAL reality ,MEDICAL personnel ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The emergence of augmented reality (AR) and mixed reality (MR) modalities has increased the potential of simulation in paramedicine education. The integration of AR/MR into education programmes should be underpinned by sound learning design; however, little is known about their effective use. The purpose of this scoping review was to identify the application and integration of AR/MR within paramedicine education. The review searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsychInfo, CINAHL and ERIC up to February 2020 to identify peer-reviewed articles describing the application or integration of any AR/virtual reality (VR) in the context of paramedicine education. The search yielded 11 records for qualitative synthesis from 170 unique records. The quality assessment showed diversity, from good to very poor quality papers. Categories of AR/MR were identified: computer-based avatar worlds, headset-based VR and screen-projection immersive spaces. An application was diverse, with triage and management of mass casualty featuring prominently. One paper described cost-effectiveness, and none discussed issues associated with volume or frequency of exposure required to achieve sustained outcomes. This review identified a small and heterogeneous evidence base describing AR/MR in paramedicine education. Limited, weak evidence demonstrates outcomes of equal to or better than traditional simulation when using AR/VR in paramedicine education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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12. Part IV: Capstone Papers for the Psychoanalysis Minor.
- Author
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Dobson, Marcia D-S. and Riker, John H.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOANALYSIS , *REPRESENTATION (Psychoanalysis) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *NEUROSCIENCES - Abstract
After the Chicago class culminates, a number of our students go on to complete the psychoanalysis minor, which requires a capstone paper that can deal with theoretical issues in psychoanalysis or relate psychoanalysis to the subjects of their majors, such as literature, psychology/neuroscience, or their own independently designed majors. We include three representative papers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Features of Pathogenic Beliefs in the Context of Childhood Maltreatment: Implications for Therapeutic Empathy.
- Author
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Reid, Jay and Kealy, David
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPISTS ,EMPATHY ,EMOTION regulation ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CONTROL (Psychology) ,PSYCHOLOGY of adult child abuse victims ,PSYCHOTHERAPIST attitudes ,ATTACHMENT behavior ,CONFLICT (Psychology) ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,EXPERIENCE ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL adjustment ,SOCIAL skills ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,THEORY ,ADVERSE childhood experiences ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
One reason why patients may seek therapy is to address constricting beliefs about themselves, others and the world that diminish the quality of their lives. These pathogenic beliefs interfere with the pursuit of personal goals and are often the source of considerable distress. In this paper, we discuss the perspective from Control-Mastery Theory that such beliefs were once adaptive in the context of earlier traumatic relational experience, and are often held in place by loyalties and attachment ties to important figures. Therapists can facilitate patients' efforts to disconfirm these beliefs by empathically understanding the form and function of the patient's pathogenic beliefs historically and in the present. Such understanding is termed "person empathy" and is found to contribute to positive therapeutic outcomes. With the aim of helping to facilitate therapists' empathy regarding patients' pathogenic beliefs, we describe in this paper some of the original functions and subsequent consequences of such beliefs in patients' lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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14. Work & Stress : Thirty years of impact.
- Author
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Taris, Toon W.
- Subjects
BIBLIOMETRICS ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SERIAL publications ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,WORK - Abstract
An introduction is presented wherein the editor discusses various reports in the issue on topics including empirical tests of the non-linear and interactive effects of job demands and job control and a review of the longitudinal research on the Job Demands-Control (JDC) model.
- Published
- 2016
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15. Approaching the self: alternative perspectives of selfwork in education.
- Author
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Allan, Julie and Harwood, Valerie
- Subjects
MENTAL health of youth ,HIGHER education ,HEGEMONY ,PSYCHIATRY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper we respond to this special issue's critical focus on mental health in education by considering the medicalised and homogenising approaches to the mental health of young people and the severely negative consequences for young people. Our argument is underpinned by the need to destabilise the hegemony of the current dominant discourses and practices of mental health used in education. The problem with these discourses and practices, informed by particular forms of psychiatry and psychology, is precisely their dominance and their popularised proxy take-up of these. We firstly outline this problem, explore the emergence and saturation of a 'damaged self' in education and consider the impact on young people. We offer counter-narratives that involve a reframing of the self in relation to ethics, politics, capability and the arts and can assist in countering the psy-dominance in education. The paper concludes with some reflections on how teachers might work against the damaging effects of the psy-disciplines and instead support young people in finding their counter-narrative selves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Toward a queered psychology of the self: Empathy and passibility from the margins to the center.
- Author
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Guzzardi, Sam
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY ,SELF ,EMPATHY ,LGBTQ+ studies ,AMERICAN dramatists ,COMMUNITY psychology - Abstract
Beginning with Kohut's classic 1959 paper on the subject, empathy has been conceptualized as a process of finding something in one's self (introspection) that has resonance with one's experience of the other. This paper, inspired by advances in queer studies, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and the Black American theater, identifies the limitations of this understanding. By putting Kohut's ideas about empathy in dialogue with French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard, Black American playwrights Jeremy O. Harris, Michael R. Jackson, and James Ijames, and the author's own clinical experience, a queered empathy is theorized that relies less on self-reference and more on passibility. The theoretical and clinical implications of this shift are explored, and the possibilities for a queered Psychology of the Self that contain a heightened possibility for responsiveness to marginalized experience are suggested. The hope of this paper is that the reader, from a multidisciplinary perspective, will be inspired to imagine a psychoanalysis and Self Psychology for all that has the potential to flourish for generations to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Memory and the Jungian Unconscious in J. G. Ballard's Autobiographical Narratives.
- Author
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Hart, Kevin
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGY , *KINDNESS - Abstract
This paper offers a comparative analysis of J. G. Ballard's Empire of the Sun, The Kindness of Women, and Miracles of Life in their engagements with the psychological theory of Carl Jung. The first half of the paper explores Jung's suggestions that psychology is to some extent ethnically determined and Eastern and Western consciousness in many ways antonymous. Challenging this view, Empire resists essentialist notions of psychology which argue that the individual psyche is in part separate from the social environment in which it forms. In Empire individual psychology changes with changing power relations and is unable to escape imperialist systems of thought. In this manner, the novel resists national and ethnic categories for the understanding of human psychology, and instead turns its focus to the effect of political structures on mental activity and self-conception. Turning from Empire to Kindness and Miracles, the second part of the paper reads Ballard's broader fictional and nonfictional autobiographies for their representation of memory as a radically constructive function of mind. In this manner, Ballard's autobiographical projects foreground the slippage between fact and fiction in the process of remembering, and challenge the conception of mind as an inelastic or deterministic structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. Theory of planned behavior and value-belief norm theory as antecedents of pro-environmental behaviour: Evidence from the local community.
- Author
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Batool, Nusrat, Wani, Mehraj Din, Shah, Shamim Ahmad, and Dada, Zubair Ahmad
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL health , *POLICY sciences , *RESIDENTIAL patterns , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *SOCIAL theory , *PSYCHOLOGY , *HEALTH behavior , *THEORY , *FACTOR analysis - Abstract
Native residents are indispensable participants in developing and conserving the natural environment. Specifying the factors that lead to responsible behavior among the local people can help increase sustainability. This paper aims to investigate the pro-environmental behavior among the local residents of the Kashmir region defined by the components of Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and Value Belief Norm (VBN) Theory. To analyze the data, Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) and Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) has been used as research methods. The results reveal that the three components of TPB (general environmental attitude, subjective norms, perceived behavior control) have a positive and significant impact on the pro-environmental behavior of residents. Moreover, the findings also demonstrate that the factors of VBN (altruistic, egoistic and biospheric values) significantly influence the general environmental attitude which in turn impacts the pro-environmental behavior of local residents. The paper seeks to contribute to the existing literature by adding local community insights based on the explanations given by socio-psychological theories within the context of natural environment. The study will help policymakers to understand better the residents' intentions and pro-environmental behavior so that they can develop strategies to manage and combat the environmental problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. Positive organisational psychology 2.0: Embracing the technological revolution.
- Author
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van Zyl, Llewellyn E., Dik, Bryan J., Donaldson, Stewart I., Klibert, Jeff J., di Blasi, Zelda, van Wingerden, Jessica, and Salanova, Marisa
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CORPORATE culture , *MEDICAL technology , *DIFFUSION of innovations , *GROUP dynamics , *PSYCHOLOGY , *WELL-being - Abstract
Positive Organisational Psychology (POP) has experienced significant growth in the past two decades, contributing to our understanding of work-related well-being and performance. However, the discipline is now on the cusp of a new wave of research and innovation that may reshape its discourse. This paper introduces the concept of 'Positive Organisational Psychology 2.0' (POP 2.0) as an evidence-based, data-driven field that utilizes technological advancements and human-centred design to understand and enhance positive characteristics of individuals, organisations, and society for optimal psychological functioning, wellbeing, and performance. The paper begins with an overview of POP's emergence, highlighting its key characteristics and exploring the factors behind its rapid growth and declining relevance. We then conceptualize POP 2.0, outline its defining features, and advocate for a broader scope, expanded focal audience, enhanced methodologies, and transformative role shifts for practitioners. We conclude by outlining opportunities, challenges and perspectives for the next wave of innovative research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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20. Elizabeth Usher memorial lecture. Models, mind maps, and metacognition: How theory is the true hero.
- Author
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Whitworth, Anne
- Subjects
REHABILITATION of aphasic persons ,PSYCHOLOGY ,LEARNING theories in education ,PSYCHOLINGUISTICS ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COMMUNICATION ,THEORY ,THERAPEUTIC alliance ,SPEECH therapy ,COGNITION - Abstract
Within the educational context of identifying the critical ingredients of an effective speech-language pathologist, this paper highlights the centrality of theory in underpinning every level of our practice. A spotlight is placed on us knowing how language and communication work, what makes our interventions work, how we can make the most difference through our choices in therapy, and what makes both us and our clients respond. So, what are the critical ingredients of an effective speech-language pathologist, of an effective therapy, of an effective therapeutic alliance, and why is this so important? While there are many foundational and guiding habits upon which new graduates, early career, and experienced clinicians shape their practice, no one habit is regarded as more important than us exploring the theoretical underpinnings of what we are doing and why. To underscore the role of theory in our everyday practice, a discourse level intervention for people with aphasia is used as an exemplar to track the complex contribution of different theories to a single intervention. Discourse level interventions are relatively new on the scene in the area of acquired language disorders. Child language interventions, on the other hand, have frequently revolved around the story, aiming to bridge the oral-literate divide through the development of narrative structure. This paper will aim to weave its own story around discourse level interventions, combining the narrative genre with the everyday genres used by adults in conversation. I will highlight how this approach taps into lexical theories, sentence processing theories, discourse organisation, and the cognitive underpinnings of language, and closely examine how this multilayering of language in context may hold some of the answers to questions around generalisation, impact, and making the greatest difference to individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Horizonal Structure of Visual Experience.
- Author
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Mitchell, Jonathan
- Subjects
SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) ,ACTION research ,SOCIAL science research ,PHILOSOPHY ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
How is it that we can visually experience complete three-dimensional objects despite being limited, in any given perceptual moment, to perceiving the sides facing us from a specific spatial perspective? To make sense of this, such visual experiences must refer to occluded or presently unseen back-sides which are not sense-perceptually given, and which cannot be sense-perceptually given while the subject is occupying the spatial perspective on the object that they currently are—I call this the horizonality of visual experience. Existing accounts of these horizonal references are unsatisfactory. In providing a satisfactory account, this paper argues that the content and structure of the visual experience of complete three-dimensional objects is as follows: the object is presented as being perceptible from yet-to-be-determined alternative points of view. As part of the content of visual experience, this motivates non-propositional attitudes of anticipation. Explicating this proposal is the central positive aim of this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A Defence of Ontological Innocence: Response to Barker.
- Author
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Werner, Jonas
- Subjects
ONTOLOGY ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PSYCHOLOGY ,UNIVERSALS (Philosophy) - Abstract
In a recent paper in this journal, Jonathan Barker argues against the claim that grounded entities are ontologically innocent. In this paper I defend the ontological innocence of grounded entities against Barker's argument. I tease out an assumption that is crucial for the success of Barker's argument and I show that the defender of ontological innocence can deny this assumption in a motivated way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Teaching Note—Popular Science Writing in a Social Work Program: From an Idea to a Student Anthology.
- Author
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Larsson, Per Olof, Högberg, Håkan, and Lundälv, Jörgen
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SOCIAL workers ,CURRICULUM ,MANUSCRIPTS ,SOCIAL work education ,STUDENTS ,WRITING ,PSYCHOLOGY of Undergraduates ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to describe how students, as part of their education, published course papers in an anthology. Over a period of 2.5 years, we followed students in an undergraduate social work program. The course, which focused on long-term illnesses and the functional barriers people with disabilities face in society, ended with a graded seminar in which students presented written manuscripts based on the course content. The papers were later compiled into a student anthology. The publishing process involved several participants, including teachers, a book publisher, and a disability organization. This article describes experiences based on the perspectives of the students, the disability organization, the publisher, and the editor. It ends with advice and recommendations for those who want to use this method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Deconstructing humanitarian compassion: Ψ as method.
- Author
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Christinaki, Artemis
- Subjects
PSYCHOLINGUISTICS ,COMPASSION ,POWER (Social sciences) ,PHILANTHROPISTS ,HUMANITARIANISM - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Psychotherapy & Counselling is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The interpretation of a phenomenon: telepathy in psychotherapy among therapists trained under Fr. Jaime C. Bulatao.
- Author
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Cervantes, Carl Lorenz and Fernandez, Karina Therese Galang
- Subjects
TELEPATHY ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INTERVIEWING ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,VIDEO recording - Abstract
Filipino psychologist Fr. Jaime C. Bulataosuggested that a shared collective consciousness allows for telepathy to occur. In the context of psychotherapy, telepathy may strengthen rapport between therapist and client, as well as enrich insight. This paper aims to describe and discuss a framework of Bulatao-inspired psychotherapy that integrates telepathy as part of the therapeutic practice. Thus, the paper asks the question: What does the Bulatao therapeutic process of telepathy look like? Descriptive phenomenology revealed four phenomenological structures: (a) Mental quietude and psychic openness; (b) Perceiving the client; (c) Receiving and reacting to telepathic stimuli; and (d) Anomalous insight. This paper has the potential to inspire a conversation with regard to the potential therapeutic uses of Bulatao's transpersonal world view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Self-Determination Theory as an underpinning theory for community maintenance programs for those who have sexually offended.
- Author
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Youssef, Carollyne
- Subjects
SEX offenders ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,HUMAN sexuality ,PSYCHOLOGY ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL care ,CRIMINALS ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,THEORY ,INDEPENDENT living ,SEX customs ,AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,REHABILITATION ,BEHAVIOR modification - Abstract
The challenges faced by those who are returning to the community after prison are well documented. Community re-entry, especially for those who have sexually offended, is particularly stressful and fraught with many difficulties. Community maintenance programmes (CMPs) are community programmes designed to assist those who are released from prison, who have generally completed an offence-specific custodial treatment programme. There remains however no known published research that has examined the programmatic features of CMPs, their efficacy, the experiences of those who facilitate and participate in CMPs, and little is known about the theoretical underpinnings of CMPs. This paper reviews some of the factors that may contribute to behaviour change and the maintenance of that change, with a particular focus on CMPs for those who have sexually offended. Stemming from two recent qualitative studies interviewing CMP participants and service providers in Australia's largest CMP, this paper proposes Self-Determination Theory (SDT) as an underpinning for CMPs. There will also be a consideration of implications for practice as well as future research. This paper proposes Self-Determination Theory as a framework for the delivery of community maintenance programmes (CMPs) for those who have sexually offended. It is the first time a framework for the delivery of CMPs is considered, with practical implications related to the content and focus of the programme discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. In Vienna 2018: Searching for Creativity in Times of Crisis.
- Author
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Ferguson, Heather and Mendelsohn, Sarah
- Subjects
CREATIVE ability ,COLLECTIVE memory ,RANDOM variables ,CRISES ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This special issue of the journal is a compilation of papers from the 41 SP st sp IAPSP Annual Conference entitled "Vienna-Kohut-Self Psychology: Searching for Creativity in Times of Crisis." Kottler and Ben co-create a unique, shared visual language in treatment, giving voice to Ben's less articulated and nascent self-states. As they work through their painful encounter, Kottler and Ben confront their largely hidden, alienated alter-ego self-states, "between different parts within a person and between people" (p. 74), which Togashi links to Buber's notion of I-Thou authentic dialogue. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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28. Precarity, affect, and the moving body.
- Author
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Light, Amanda
- Subjects
AFFECT (Psychology) ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,UNCERTAINTY ,MENTAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,PSYCHOLOGY ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEORY - Abstract
It is recognised that there is a correlation between precarity and affective mental health conditions that is typically overlooked due to the individualisation of wellbeing discourses and interventions. This paper aims to explore alternative psychotherapeutic practices that foreground relational, embodied and ecological approaches to mental health and wellbeing. It considers precarity's effects through the context of the moving body and an openness to human and more-than-human inter-connections. Using a socio-new materialist and critical-posthuman framework, precarity is conceptualised as an assemblage of affects and emergent capacities. It is within this framing that empirical data – taken from nine qualitative interviews with practitioners from the fields of dance/movement psychotherapy, embodied-relational therapy and eco-psychotherapy – is discussed. The study identifies that precarity can also provide opportunities to affirm our inter-dependencies within an inter-connected human and more-than-human world. Alternative practices can help cultivate the relational capacities through which precarity's complexities may be navigated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. "Quite Artificial, Awkward, and Unnecessarily Neologistic": Early Phenomenology and Psychology Arguing About the Fundamentals of Aesthetics.
- Author
-
Petraschka, Thomas
- Subjects
PHENOMENOLOGY ,AESTHETICS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,TWENTIETH century ,PHENOMENOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
As phenomenology rose to prominence at the beginning of the 20th century, several aestheticians tried to establish the Husserlian method of "phenomenological reduction" in the field of aesthetics. These ventures were met with resistance from psychological aesthetics, which was the predominant form of aesthetics in the German-speaking world at the time. This paper examines, first, practical attempts to apply the method of "phenomenological reduction" in aesthetics. Using Waldemar Conrad and Moritz Geiger as examples, I try to trace what aestheticians actually did when they applied this method in their investigations. Secondly, I reconstruct the four central objections with which psychological aesthetics reacted to such attempts. I have identified four central counterarguments in the work of Johannes Volkelt and Oswald Külpe, who were among the most eminent critics of phenomenological aesthetics: the transcendental argument, the susceptibility-to-errors argument, the constructivism argument, and the non-normativity argument. Finally, I also discuss the refusal of psychological aesthetics to acknowledge that a genuine phenomenological method even existed and the consequences of this refusal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Enhancing Behavioral Health Assessment of Older Adults.
- Author
-
Moye, Jennifer
- Subjects
SERIAL publications ,PSYCHOSES ,PSYCHOLOGY ,ELDER care ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,OLD age - Abstract
An editorial is presented on psychological assessment of older adults. Topics include valid assessment methods supporting both clinical care and research focusing on older adults; and summarizing the evidence for prospective memory training in older adults, supporting the use of mental imagery, and external aids.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Psychological predictors of seasonal influenza vaccination uptake among adults with a high-risk physical health condition: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Borthwick, Claire, O'Connor, Rory, and Kennedy, Louise
- Subjects
INFLUENZA prevention ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CINAHL database ,HEALTH attitudes ,HEALTH behavior ,INFLUENZA vaccines ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,PSYCHOLOGY ,VACCINATION ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEORY ,SOCIAL support ,AT-risk people ,ADULTS - Abstract
This review tested the use of psychological theories for predicting seasonal influenza vaccination behaviour among adults with a health condition (for which the vaccine is clinically indicated). Ovid (1946–August 2018), Embase (1974–August 2018), CINAHL (1958–August 2018) and PSYCInfo (1986–August 2018) databases were searched. Studies drawing upon a psychosocial or psychological theory to explain seasonal influenza vaccination behaviour among adults with a high-risk health condition were eligible for inclusion. Papers were systematically extracted by title, abstract and full text. Quantitative and qualitative studies were included, and all papers were quality assessed. A total of 4840 papers were identified after removal of duplicates. Twelve papers were retained in the narrative synthesis. Studies were conducted across a range of high-risk condition populations and most (83.3%) were cross-sectional. The Health Belief Model (HBM), the model of Psychological Flexibility, The Health Action Process Approach and House's Framework of Social Support were applied. Ten out of 12 papers (83.3%) drew on the HBM. There was evidence of an association between HBM perceived benefits, perceived barriers and vaccination behaviour, although there were inconsistencies across studies. This review highlighted the need for further research, particularly prospective studies of high methodological quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Critical posthumanisms, postqualitative inquiry, and conventional qualitative research: some interrogations and contemplations on their entangled identities and futurities.
- Author
-
Camiré, Martin
- Abstract
Work conducted in the critical posthumanisms and postqualitative inquiry (i.e., the posts) has expanded in many fields, including psychology. Despite claims that the posts can help inquirers venture beyond the purported limits of conventional qualitative research (i.e., the conventional), the posts are not absolved of questioning. The present paper experiments with cascade questioning to interrogate what
is with the intent to instigate whatcould be by contemplating the entangled identity politics of the conventional/posts. The paper begins with an introductory anecdote, followed by conjectures on identity and politics. Six interrogations/contemplations are then offered. The first five interrogations/contemplations present key criticisms that have been attributed to the conventional and the posts. The paper subsequently adopts a more conciliatory tone, with the sixth interrogation/contemplation (i.e., envisioning entangled futurities for methodology) positioning the conventional/posts not as antagonists but as always already entangled in their coarticulated becomings. Implications for the human subject and for psychology are offered, followed by concluding thoughts. Ultimately, if the posts are to fulfil their political promise, they must remain nimble and open for debate by constantly challenging the identities they erect and the futurities they create relative to the conventional. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Fear and loathing, love and othering: the legacy of early Oedipal struggles as manifest in racialised dynamics in the consulting room.
- Author
-
de Rementeria, Alexandra
- Subjects
- *
FEAR , *CONCEPTUAL models , *SOCIAL justice , *INTERPERSONAL psychotherapy , *GROUP identity , *COUNTERTRANSFERENCE (Psychology) , *ANGER , *SOCIAL alienation , *RACISM , *PSYCHOLOGY , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *LOVE , *PSYCHOANALYTIC theory , *CHILD psychology - Abstract
This paper takes as its premise the idea that transferential phenomena emerge out of the endless interactions between the wider social context, including myriad social injustices, and the inter and intra psychic events psychoanalytic therapists are more familiar with thinking about. Freud's was a neuro-psycho-social model of development, with the interrelationship between internal life and social practices carefully mapped in 'Totem and Taboo' (1913) and 'Civilisation and Its Discontents' (S. Freud, 1930). However, what Freud left undone, and is still only nascent in its development, is the work of mapping how this interaction between internal and external, between psycho and social, manifests in the consulting room. Focusing on race, as one aspect of identity that powerfully impacts transferential phenomena, the paper presents accounts of clinical events, one disguised, one fictionalised, to explore the meaning of the author's own Whiteness in this context. Using a Kleinian and post-Kleinian understanding of very early Oedipal struggles, 'Whiteness' is formulated as an anti-developmental merger with the ideal breast. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Harm reduction and self psychology in tandem: A case of crystal meth addiction.
- Author
-
Jones, D. Bradley
- Subjects
HARM reduction ,METHAMPHETAMINE ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ADDICTIONS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SELF - Abstract
This paper shows the theoretical similarities between Harm Reduction Psychotherapy and Heinz Kohut's Self Psychology, and delineates how each of these clinical perspectives complement and enhance one another. Using these two theories in tandem provides further opportunities for clinicians to treat a larger proportion of the substance using population not yet ready for cessation or abstinence. A case involving crystal meth addiction is presented, and aspects of the treatment are explicated including identifying the self-regulatory and symbolic functionality of substance use, and working with the patient's own ambivalence about his behavior. A self- object "twinship" is also highlighted as having an important mutative impact on the treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. On Joseph Aguayo's paper about Bion's Notes on Memory and Desire (IJPA 95).
- Author
-
Fachler, Amit
- Subjects
- *
MEMORY , *DESIRE , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
A letter to the editor is presented in response to an article by Joseph Aguayo that was published in the previous issue about the psychoanalytic study on memory and desire.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Social workers as an action-oriented sociotherapist: an existential health discourse.
- Author
-
Nilsson, Håkan
- Subjects
EVALUATION of psychotherapy ,MINDFULNESS ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,PROBLEM solving ,COUNSELING ,SOCIAL workers ,RESEARCH methodology ,SOCIAL change ,PSYCHOLOGY ,LIFE ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SELF-efficacy ,WALKING ,CONCEPTUAL models ,DISCOURSE analysis ,SOCIAL services ,HORTICULTURE ,SOCIAL case work - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to reinvigorate sociotherapy by contextualizing its practice within a logotherapeutic and an existential health discourse. This approach is used to enhance meaningfulness in life within the framework of a sociotherapy, through mindfulness, and greenspace activities such as walking and gardening. This discourse has been largely inspired by: 1) sociotherapy's capacity to facilitate existential health; 2) the international research community's struggle for a broader concept of health; 3) World Health Organization's concept of existential health; and, 4) Frankl's assertion that people must be understood holistically as physical, psychological, social and spiritual beings. This paper approaches the social worker as sociotherapist (SWS) from an ecological and systemic perspective, the aim being to move the client from an egoistic to a mindful and ecological mind-set. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Utilising ubuntu in social work practice: ubuntu in the eyes of the multimodal approach.
- Author
-
Chigangaidze, Robert K.
- Subjects
COMPUTER software ,PROFESSIONAL practice ,SENSES ,HUMAN rights ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,SPIRITUALITY ,SOCIAL workers ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,BEHAVIOR ,COGNITION ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOCIAL services ,PHILOSOPHY ,VISUALIZATION - Abstract
African social workers and psychologists have called for the utility of ubuntu philosophy in the fields of social work and psychology. Ubuntu is an African philosophy that is based on humanness, kindness, communality, socio-structural issues such as social justice, and human rights. This paper explores the philosophy of ubuntu guided by the seven modalities of the multimodal approach, which are behaviour, effect, sensation, imagery, cognition, interpersonal relationships and drugs/biology. The article suggests that ubuntu as an African philosophy has potential to contribute two modalities in addition to the seven modalities in the multimodal approach by the South African psychologist Arnold Lazarus. It argues that ubuntu contributes two domains in assessments and these are as follows: the person-physical environment relationship and the spiritual relationship. Given the emphasis on eco-spiritually informed social work, this paper calls for the adoption of these two modalities for the assessment and intervention plans in social work practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. On the origins and consequences of Simon's modular approach to bounded rationality in economics.
- Author
-
Petracca, Enrico
- Subjects
COGNITION ,NEOCLASSICAL school of economics ,BOUNDED rationality ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper discusses why in the 1950s Herbert Simon introduced bounded rationality as a modular notion—consisting of a "cognitive" and an "environmental" module—and explores the consequences of this choice. Originally, Simon emphasised cognition in economics and the environment in psychology to meet specific disciplinary interests. Continuing adaptively to emphasise cognition in economics has led, then, to significant unintended consequences: (i) the easier assimilation of Simon's bounded rationality by neoclassical economics, and (ii) the persistent confusion between Simon's and Kahneman and Tversky's contribution. Seeing the recognition of his credit endangered, Simon reemphasised the environment when Gigerenzer introduced environment-based ecological rationality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Introducing compassion focused psychosexual therapy.
- Author
-
Vosper, Jane, Irons, Chris, Mackenzie-White, Kathy, Saunders, Felicity, Lewis, Rebecca, and Gibson, Stuart
- Subjects
INTEGRATIVE medicine ,THEORY-practice relationship ,PSYCHOLOGY ,COMPASSION ,THEORY ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
Psychosexual therapy has undergone numerous developments since the introduction of behavioural therapy for sexual difficulties by Masters and Johnson in the 1960s. We argue that theory and practice from Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT) offers a novel and relevant development to existing approaches to psychosexual theory and practice. CFT presents a theory driven, flexible, transdiagnostic and integrative way of understanding, formulating and treating general mental health problems. In this paper we propose that the underlying theory from CFT integrates well with existing approaches to psychosexual therapy, and offers some helpfulways of formulating sexual problems to present a coherent rationale for treatment strategies. We also argue that some additional CFT treatment strategies already used in general mental health settings are appropriate and helpful for those experiencing sexual difficulties. This paper outlines how CFT can be theoretically integrated with existing psychosexual therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Eco-psychology: a critical paradigm in the climate emergency.
- Author
-
Rhodes, Paul and Dunk, James
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY ,NATURAL disasters ,POLITICAL participation ,ONTOLOGIES (Information retrieval) ,CLIMATE change ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
This paper presents an argument that mainstream psychological practice is not equipped to respond to distress associated with the climate emergency. This is because the field focusses on individual pathology, rather than ecological context. It remains reticent about activism and politics and is ontologically aligned with the Anthropocene, a new era in which the human species is creating an observable effect in the geological record, to the detriment of the planet and its life forms. An introduction is provided to ecopsychology, a movement that has sought to subvert and transform mainstream psychology over the last three decades. Ecopsychology still offers an opportunity for mainstream psychology to alter its approach in the face of the climate emergency. What is already known about this topic: Clinical psychology is focussed on intrapsychic processes and indiivdual therapy. Psychology is typically hesitant about including political activism in clinical theorising or practice. New conceptualisations of both the psyche and practice are required in the Anthropocene. What this paper adds: Eco-psychology provides a framework for psychology in the climate crisis. The history of eco-psychology has ontological implications for traditional psychology. Interventions need to consider human distress as tied to the distress of non-human others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The role of emotions and injunctive norms in breastfeeding: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Russell, Pascale Sophie, Smith, Debbie M., Birtel, Michèle D., Hart, Kathryn H., and Golding, Sarah E.
- Subjects
BREASTFEEDING & psychology ,CINAHL database ,MEDICAL databases ,ONLINE information services ,ETHICS ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SOCIAL norms ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INFANT nutrition ,THEORY ,HEALTH behavior ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EMOTIONS ,INTENTION ,SOCIAL skills ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDLINE ,WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Breastfeeding has many known benefits, but rates vary globally. We propose two main reasons why psychological theory and interventions have not been successful to date in explaining breastfeeding behaviours. Specifically, prior research underestimates the importance of (1) specific emotions and (2) wider injunctive influences (i.e., societal and moral norms about what women feel they ought to be doing) in the breastfeeding experience. Therefore, we conducted a systematic review of quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods studies that explored whether injunctive norms and/ or specific emotions are associated with breastfeeding behaviours (i.e., intentions, initiation and duration). Seventy-two papers were included in this review; data were extracted and quality appraisals conducted for all included studies. A meta-analysis of effect sizes was performed with the quantitative data. A convergent qualitative synthesis of the data was conducted, resulting in the following line of argument: Breastfeeding is a social behaviour and not a personal/individual behaviour. From this line of argument, three themes with associated sub-themes were developed, highlighting the importance of both specific emotions and injunctive norms on breastfeeding behaviours. These influences are discussed in relation to both theoretical and practical implications, as well as future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Logic and Discrimination.
- Author
-
Ficara, Elena
- Subjects
- *
LOGIC , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SOCIAL psychology - Abstract
The paper is about the connection between logic and discrimination, with special focus on Plumwood's ideas in her groundbreaking article 'The Politics of Reason. Towards a Feminist Logic' (1993). Although Plumwood's paper is not focused on the notion of discrimination, what she writes is useful for illuminating some basic mechanisms of thought that are at the basis of discriminatory practices. After an introductory section about the concepts of logic and discrimination and their possible interconnections, I present Plumwood's ideas in 1993 with a special focus on their relevance for understanding the nature of discrimination. More specifically, I use examples of discriminatory practices that make the connection between logical operations and oppression envisaged by Plumwood clear. I focus especially on two questions: Can logic produce discrimination? Can logic contribute to the fight against discrimination? If so, how? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The darkest field of medicine? The integration of psychological knowledge into medical education in the Habsburg Monarchy (1780s–1840s).
- Author
-
Kovács, Janka
- Subjects
- *
MEDICINE , *MEDICAL education , *MONARCHY , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
This paper focuses on a specific aspect of the emergence of psychology and psychiatry as scientific disciplines in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. It examines how psychological knowledge, which was scattered across different fields of knowledge such as philosophy and anthropology, as well as medical subfields such as physiology, pathology and state medicine, was filtered into medical education in three medical faculties of the Habsburg Monarchy: Vienna, Prague and Pest. As education was the primary arena of producing authoritative medical knowledge, the three institutions played a key role in the transfers of knowledge within the Monarchy and in shaping 'official' medical practices acknowledged by the state. These in turn could be used to validate different measures to normalize or optimize its population. Through the lens of education and the underlying tension between the different approaches to psychological knowledge that constituted a type of 'arcane knowledge' in the period, with fluid and often dubious boundaries and questionable applicability, the article points at the epistemological uncertainty and transitory nature of the psychological field. The paper also looks at how it was nevertheless integrated into medical education with varying success by the 1840s as part of the professionalization of psychiatry and with the pronounced aim of training specialists who could cooperate in creating functioning spaces for the mad where they could not only be kept, but also normalized and (re)integrated into society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Supporting self-determination among internationally educated nurses: a discussion.
- Author
-
Randall, Paige S. and De Gagne, Jennie C.
- Subjects
- *
RACISM , *WELL-being , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *SOCIAL support , *NURSING , *SELF-perception , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *PSYCHOLOGY , *FOREIGN nurses , *SOCIAL isolation , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *THEORY , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *NURSES , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *PATIENT safety - Abstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the global nursing shortage. As the shortage worsens, reliance on internationally educated nurses is expected to increase, presenting challenges and opportunities for health care systems and nurse leaders worldwide. While internationally educated nurses bring cultural and ethnic diversity to domestic workforces, they face significant hurdles in successfully integrating due to racism, discrimination, and isolation, which can have a negative impact on their self-determination. The challenges encountered by internationally educated nurses can not only affect their self-determination, but they can also pose risks to patient safety. Objectives: This purpose of this paper was to examine the extant literature to describe the experiences of internationally educated nurses through the lens of Ryan and Deci's Self-Determination Theory. Another aim was to offer nurse managers and administrators strategies for supporting internationally educated nurses within their health care facilities. Design: Discussion Paper. Conclusions: Health care organizations should allocate time and resources to facilitate the professional transition of internationally educated nurses, promoting their psychological well-being and self-determination by fostering autonomy, competence, and relatedness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Mixed-Effects Models for Cognitive Development Researchers.
- Author
-
Muradoglu, Melis, Cimpian, Joseph R., and Cimpian, Andrei
- Subjects
COGNITIVE development ,PSYCHOLOGISTS ,PROBLEM solving ,RESEARCH & development ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Mixed-effects models are an analytic technique for modeling repeated measurement or nested data. This paper explains the logic of mixed-effects modeling and describes two examples of mixed-effects analyses using R. The intended audience of the paper is psychologists who specialize in cognitive development research. Therefore, the concepts and examples covered will focus primarily on repeated-measurement data resulting from studies in which participants respond to multiple items or trials. However, many of the concepts and examples we cover will likely be of use to readers outside this area of psychology. Finally, we discuss recommendations for dealing with practical challenges, suggest approaches for troubleshooting, and provide guidance on reporting results from mixed-effects models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Daring to Hope: A couple's journey from trauma into connection.
- Author
-
Grange Isaacson, Tyia
- Subjects
COUPLES ,DESPAIR ,HEALING ,HOPE ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The author presents the treatment of a deeply traumatized, high conflict couple, massively overwhelmed by multiple stressors. Building upon the rich legacy of self psychology, this paper aims to illustrate how couple therapists can invite traumatized partners to move from despair and rage into hope and connection. This treatment approach is fundamentally based upon a systems perspective, but nested within that overarching stance are several foundational principles, including: 1) the concept of thirdness, or the view that surrendering one's own perspective for the sake of connection allows an additional perspective 2) empathic, subject-centered listening that includes emotional dwelling as advocated by self psychology; 3) conceptualizing the system as a whole, rather than only the individuals, as lacking adequate soothing; 4) recognizing the influence of cultural forces upon the couple; 5) working with each partner's self states or the idea that each individual has many parts within themselves and when invited into the treatment room can generate greater connection and healing; and 6) enlisting the partners as co-therapists. These basic tenets helped a mutually traumatized couple find their way out of fear. The paper illustrates how even in a barren landscape, where there is emotional dwelling, hope can germinate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The client, the therapist and the paranormal: a response to the special edition on psychotherapy and the paranormal.
- Author
-
Lawrence, Tony R.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PARAPSYCHOLOGISTS ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,PSYCHOLOGY ,OCCUPATIONAL therapists - Abstract
Copyright of European Journal of Psychotherapy & Counselling is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The other side of the coin: editors vs. writers in professional journals.
- Author
-
Simón, Armando
- Subjects
DECISION making ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,MANUSCRIPTS ,PUBLISHING ,SERIAL publications ,WORK ,EDITORS ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Editors of professional journals have published articles describing their hardships in editing a journal. The present author presents his personal experience to put forth the premise that sometimes the decision process for accepting or rejecting a manuscript for publication by editors and/or reviewers may actually - at times - not be the rational decision making process that one would assume would be the case. Informed consent is not required on this study. There was no funding for it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Helping older pedestrians navigate in the city: comparisons of visual, auditory and haptic guidance instructions in a virtual environment.
- Author
-
Montuwy, Angélique, Dommes, Aurélie, and Cahour, Béatrice
- Subjects
BODY movement ,ANALYSIS of variance ,AUDITORY perception ,CHI-squared test ,COMPUTER assisted instruction ,INTERVIEWING ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PEDESTRIANS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SEX distribution ,STATISTICS ,TECHNOLOGY ,TOUCH ,VIRTUAL reality ,VISION ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,OLD age ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Preserving older pedestrians' navigation skills in urban environments is a challenge for maintaining their quality of life. However, existing aids do not take into account older people's perceptual and cognitive declines nor their user experience, and they call upon sensory modalities that are already used during walking. The present study was aimed at comparing different guidance instructions using visual, auditory, and haptic feedback in order to identify the most efficient and best accepted one(s). Sixteen middle-age (non-retired) adults, 21 younger-old (young-retired) adults, and 21 older-old (old-retired) adults performed a navigation task in a virtual environment. The task was performed with visual feedback (directional arrows superimposed on the visual scenes), auditory feedback (sounds in the left/right ear), haptic feedback (vibrotactile information delivered by a wristband), combinations of different types of sensory feedback, or a paper map. The results showed that older people benefited from the sensory guidance instructions, as compared to the paper map. Visual and auditory feedbacks were associated with better performance and user experience than haptic feedback or the paper map, and the benefits were the greatest among the older-old participants, even though the paper-map familiarity was appreciated. Several recommendations for designing pedestrian navigation aids are proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to provide insight into female sexual difficulties.
- Author
-
O'Mullan, Cathy, Doherty, Maryanne, Coates, Rosemary, and Tilley, P. J. Matt
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,ANTIDEPRESSANTS ,FEMALE reproductive organ diseases ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,HUMAN sexuality ,WOMEN'S health ,SEXUAL dysfunction ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Sexual experiences and behaviour are particularly open to social and cultural influences; this is especially true within the area of female sexuality. While research into the social and cultural aspects of sexuality proliferated throughout the 1970s and 1980s, contemporary biomedical approaches to sexuality research have largely ignored the complex interplay of such dimensions. In this methodological paper, we reflect upon how Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) can be used by sexuality researchers to explore women's sexual experiences and difficulties and to locate these experiences within cultural and social contexts. By drawing on the authors' experiences of using IPA to explore how women cope with the sexual side effects of antidepressant medication, we provide an overview of IPA as a research approach, briefly summarise studies which have used IPA to explore women's sexual experiences and difficulties and outline a series of steps on how to conduct an IPA study. It is hoped that this paper will stimulate debate, and encourage sexuality researchers to explore and consider the use of IPA to contribute to a research agenda based on women's individual needs and desires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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