Listening to a patient: An exploratory experimental investigation into the effects of vocalization and therapist gender on interpreting clinical material

Author:

Dauphin Barry1,Halverson Stacey2,Pouliot Sarah3,Slowik Linda1

Affiliation:

1. University of Detroit Mercy, Detroit, Michigan.

2. Texas Scottish Rite Hospital, Dallas, Texas.

3. Private practice in Birmingham, Michigan.

Abstract

Carefully listening to the patient is of paramount importance for psychoanalysis and psychoanalytic psychotherapy. The present study explored whether patient vocalization as well as the gender of the analyst play significant roles in clinical listening. Fifty-one psychoanalysts and psychoanalytic therapists were randomly assigned to listen to one of two dramatized psychoanalytic sessions. The content of the sessions was the same for both versions, but the sessions were dramatized differently. Some differences emerged between the versions, especially on ratings of reality testing, impulse control, pressured speech, patient was confusing, and awareness of imagery. Furthermore, differences emerged between male and female analysts in terms of ratings of intervention strategies and countertransference reactions to the patient material. Session version and gender affect different ratings. Implications of the findings are discussed as is the utility of using more ecologically valid material in conducting empirical research into clinical judgment.

Publisher

Guilford Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,Phychiatric Mental Health

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