AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how therapists manage differing levels of connection with each spouse during couple therapy, highlighting moments of one-sided affiliation.
  • Video analysis of first therapy sessions shows that such imbalances often result in one spouse feeling excluded from the conversation.
  • Therapists can address these asymmetries through actions that either rebalance their focus back to the overlooked spouse or engage both partners as a unified couple, emphasizing both individual and collective needs.

Article Abstract

The study demonstrates how asymmetries in therapists' affiliations with spouses emerge and are addressed in couple therapy. A total of 4 video-recorded couple therapy first sessions were subjected to conversation analysis. The moment-by moment interactions that contribute to one sided affiliation, as well as the therapists' ways of managing such asymmetry, are described in detail. Asymmetries of affiliation regularly co-occur with the exclusion of 1 spouse from the interaction. Asymmetries of affiliation and participation can be addressed by 2 types of action by the therapist: (a) In counterbalancing moves, the therapist shifts their affiliation back to the spouse that was neglected. (b) In systemic couple-directed interventions, the therapist creates symmetry of affiliation and participation not only by attending to the individual spouses but also by addressing the couple as a single social unit. The observations are discussed in the light of the concept of split alliance and alliance ruptures, as well as in the context of research into affiliation as a generic property of social interaction. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/pst0000348DOI Listing

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