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      A Mixed Methods Framework for Psychoanalytic Group Therapy: From Qualitative Records to a Quantitative Approach Using T-Pattern, Lag Sequential, and Polar Coordinate Analyses

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          Abstract

          Conducted within a mixed methods framework, this study focuses on the conversation-facilitation role of a lead therapist during group psychotherapy with adolescents. Conversation is an essential component of psychoanalytic psychotherapies and there is growing interest in describing and studying the impact of conversational techniques. One way to do this is to report on specific approaches, such as questioning, paraphrasing, and mentalization in intervention turns and to analyze their impact on the therapist-patient relationship. The main aim of this study was to investigate differences in communication strategies used by a lead therapist in the early and late stages of therapy with six adolescents aged 13–15 years. We employed a mixed methods design based on systematic direct observation supplemented by indirect observation. The observational methodology design was nomothetic, follow-up, and multidimensional. The choice of methodology is justified by our use of an ad hoc observation instrument for communication strategies combining a field format and a category system. We analyzed interobserver agreement quantitatively by Cohen’s kappa using GSEQ5 software. Following confirmation of the reliability of the data, we analyzed the lead therapist’s conversation-facilitation techniques in sessions 5 and 29 of a 30-session program by quantitatively analyzing what were initially qualitative data using T-pattern detection (THEME v.6 Edu software), lag sequential analysis (GSEQ5 software), and polar coordinate analysis (HOISAN v. 1.6.3.3.6. software and R software). The results show changes in the techniques used from the start to the end of therapy. Of the 28 communication strategies analyzed, three were particularly common: questioning and paraphrasing in session 5 and questioning and mentalization in session 29. This mixed methods study shows that combined use of T-pattern detection, lag sequential analysis, and polar coordinate analysis can offer meaningful and objective insights into group psychotherapy through the lens of the therapist.

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          Meta-analysis of therapeutic relationship variables in youth and family therapy: the evidence for different relationship variables in the child and adolescent treatment outcome literature.

          This meta-analysis examines associations between therapeutic relationship variables, and the extent to which they account for variability in treatment outcomes, in 49 youth treatment studies. Correlations between therapeutic relationship variables ranged from modest to strong. Among the best predictors of youth outcomes were counselor interpersonal skills, therapist direct influence skills, youth willingness to participate in treatment, parent willingness to participate in treatment, youth participation in treatment, and parent participation in treatment. Adequacy of current approaches to conceptualizing and measuring therapeutic relationship variables, such as the therapeutic alliance, in youth and family therapy is discussed. This paper represents the most comprehensive analysis of therapeutic relationship constructs in the youth treatment literature.
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            Indirect Observation in Everyday Contexts: Concepts and Methodological Guidelines within a Mixed Methods Framework

            Indirect observation is a recent concept in systematic observation. It largely involves analyzing textual material generated either indirectly from transcriptions of audio recordings of verbal behavior in natural settings (e.g., conversation, group discussions) or directly from narratives (e.g., letters of complaint, tweets, forum posts). It may also feature seemingly unobtrusive objects that can provide relevant insights into daily routines. All these materials constitute an extremely rich source of information for studying everyday life, and they are continuously growing with the burgeoning of new technologies for data recording, dissemination, and storage. Narratives are an excellent vehicle for studying everyday life, and quantitization is proposed as a means of integrating qualitative and quantitative elements. However, this analysis requires a structured system that enables researchers to analyze varying forms and sources of information objectively. In this paper, we present a methodological framework detailing the steps and decisions required to quantitatively analyze a set of data that was originally qualitative. We provide guidelines on study dimensions, text segmentation criteria, ad hoc observation instruments, data quality controls, and coding and preparation of text for quantitative analysis. The quality control stage is essential to ensure that the code matrices generated from the qualitative data are reliable. We provide examples of how an indirect observation study can produce data for quantitative analysis and also describe the different software tools available for the various stages of the process. The proposed method is framed within a specific mixed methods approach that involves collecting qualitative data and subsequently transforming these into matrices of codes (not frequencies) for quantitative analysis to detect underlying structures and behavioral patterns. The data collection and quality control procedures fully meet the requirement of flexibility and provide new perspectives on data integration in the study of biopsychosocial aspects in everyday contexts.
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              HOISAN 1.2: Programa informático para uso en Metodología Observacional

              La herramienta HOISAN (Herramienta de Observación de las Interacciones Sociales en Ambientes Naturales) es una aplicación informática que permite la codificación, registro, descripción y manipulación de grabaciones o del visionado en tiempo real desde una o varias cámaras. Permite trabajar con todos los tipos de datos: secuencias de eventos, de estados, mixtas, de intervalos de tiempo y de eventos multimodales. La métrica del registro observacional utiliza parámetros primarios y medidas derivadas o secundarias. Tiene la capacidad de analizar la producción verbal, así como de calcular distintos tipos de acuerdo e índices de correlación. El programa admite el intercambio de datos con programas específicos de uso en Metodología Observacional (SDIS-GSEQ, OBSERVER, THEME y MOTS), otros programas de carácter general (hojas de cálculo, paquetes estadísticos, procesadores de textos), y programas para el análisis cualitativo (Atlas.ti) y la exportación de los datos a PDF. En este trabajo se presentan, además, los resultados de un análisis de calidad del dato pertenecientes a una herramienta de observación para el fútbol 7.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Psychol
                Front Psychol
                Front. Psychol.
                Frontiers in Psychology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-1078
                11 August 2020
                2020
                : 11
                : 1922
                Affiliations
                [1] 1FPCEE Blanquerna, Ramon Llull University , Barcelona, Spain
                [2] 2Faculty of Psychology, Institute of Neurosciences, University of Barcelona , Barcelona, Spain
                Author notes

                Edited by: Reitske Meganck, Ghent University, Belgium

                Reviewed by: Giulio de Felice, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; Antonio Hernández-Mendo, University of Malaga, Spain; Rafael E. Reigal, University of Malaga, Spain

                *Correspondence: Eulàlia Arias-Pujol, eulaliaap@ 123456blanquerna.url.edu

                This article was submitted to Psychology for Clinical Settings, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

                Article
                10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01922
                7431463
                32849129
                abac0620-8426-4ec7-abf4-79c41955ea46
                Copyright © 2020 Arias-Pujol and Anguera.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 03 November 2019
                : 13 July 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 4, Tables: 8, Equations: 0, References: 91, Pages: 15, Words: 0
                Categories
                Psychology
                Original Research

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                mixed methods,qual-quan-qual integration,group therapy,adolescents,psychotherapist interactions

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