Nyman-Salonen Petra, Kykyri Virpi-Liisa, Tschacher Wolfgang, Muotka Joona, Tourunen Anu, Penttonen Markku, Seikkula Jaakko
Department of Psychology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
Front Psychol. 2021 Nov 11;12:718353. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.718353. eCollection 2021.
Nonverbal synchrony between individuals has a robust relation to the positive aspects of relationships. In psychotherapy, where talking is the cure, nonverbal synchrony has been related to a positive outcome of therapy and to a stronger therapeutic alliance between therapist and client in dyadic settings. Only a few studies have focused on nonverbal synchrony in multi-actor therapy conversations. Here, we studied the synchrony of head and body movements in couple therapy, with four participants present (spouses and two therapists). We analyzed more than 2000min of couple therapy videos from 11 couple therapy cases using Motion Energy Analysis and a Surrogate Synchrony (SUSY), a procedure used earlier in dyadic psychotherapy settings. SUSY was calculated for all six dyads per session, leading to synchrony computations for 66 different dyads. Significant synchrony occurred in all 29 analyzed sessions and between the majority of dyads. Complex models were used to determine the relations between nonverbal synchrony and the clients' well-being and all participants' evaluations of the therapeutic alliance. The clients' well-being was related to body synchronies in the sessions. Differences were found between the clients' and therapists' alliance evaluations: the clients' alliance evaluations were related to synchrony between both dyads of opposite gender, whereas the therapists' alliance evaluations were related to synchrony between dyads of the same gender, but opposite to themselves. With four participants present, our study introduces a new aspect of nonverbal synchrony, since as a dyad synchronizes, the other two participants are observing it. Nonverbal synchrony seems to be as important in couple therapy as in individual psychotherapy, but the presence of multiple participants makes the patterns more complex.
个体之间的非言语同步与人际关系的积极方面有着密切的关系。在以谈话为治疗方式的心理治疗中,非言语同步与治疗的积极结果以及二元情境中治疗师与来访者之间更强的治疗联盟有关。只有少数研究关注多参与者治疗对话中的非言语同步。在此,我们研究了夫妻治疗中头部和身体动作的同步情况,有四名参与者在场(夫妻双方和两名治疗师)。我们使用运动能量分析和替代同步(SUSY)对来自11个夫妻治疗案例的2000多分钟的夫妻治疗视频进行了分析,SUSY是一种先前在二元心理治疗情境中使用的程序。每次会话为所有六个二元组计算SUSY,从而得出66个不同二元组的同步计算结果。在所有29个分析会话中以及大多数二元组之间都出现了显著的同步。使用复杂模型来确定非言语同步与来访者幸福感以及所有参与者对治疗联盟的评价之间的关系。来访者的幸福感与会话中的身体同步有关。在来访者和治疗师对联盟的评价之间发现了差异:来访者对联盟的评价与异性二元组之间的同步有关,而治疗师对联盟的评价与同性但与自己相反的二元组之间的同步有关。有四名参与者在场,我们的研究引入了非言语同步的一个新方面,因为当一个二元组同步时,另外两名参与者在观察它。非言语同步在夫妻治疗中似乎与个体心理治疗中一样重要,但多个参与者的存在使模式更加复杂。