Greenberg L S, Ford C L, Alden L S, Johnson S M
Department of Psychology, York University, Ontario, Canada.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 1993 Feb;61(1):78-84. doi: 10.1037//0022-006x.61.1.78.
This article presents 3 different studies of in-session changes in emotionally focused couples therapy (EFT). Studies of in-session conflict events demonstrate both that couples' conflict interaction at the end of treatment is more affiliative and interdependent than at the beginning of treatment and that peak session conflict interaction is deeper in level of experience and more affiliative than the interaction in poor session conflict episodes. In addition, events beginning with intimate, affective self-disclosure by one partner were found to involve greater affiliation in spouses' responses to the self-disclosure than in a control event not involving self-disclosure. The possible change processes in EFT are discussed in light of these results.
本文介绍了3项关于情绪聚焦夫妻治疗(EFT)过程中变化的不同研究。对治疗过程中冲突事件的研究表明,治疗结束时夫妻的冲突互动比治疗开始时更具亲和性和相互依赖性,而且治疗过程中冲突互动的高峰在体验层面上比治疗效果不佳时的冲突事件中的互动更深且更具亲和性。此外,研究发现,一方伴侣以亲密的情感自我表露开始的事件中,配偶对自我表露的反应比在不涉及自我表露的对照事件中更具亲和性。根据这些结果,本文讨论了EFT中可能的变化过程。