1. Descriptive Analysis of the Verbal Behavior of a Therapist: A Known-Group Validity Analysis of the Putative Behavioral Functions Involved in Clinical Interaction
- Author
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Virues-Ortega, Javier, Montaño-Fidalgo, Montserrat, Froján-Parga, María Xesús, and Calero-Elvira, Ana
- Subjects
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VERBAL behavior , *QUANTITATIVE research , *BEHAVIOR therapists , *HYPOTHESIS , *BOX-Jenkins forecasting , *THERAPEUTICS , *MARITAL relations - Abstract
Abstract: This study analyzes the interobserver agreement and hypothesis-based known-group validity of the Therapist''s Verbal Behavior Category System (SISC-INTER). The SISC-INTER is a behavioral observation protocol comprised of a set of verbal categories representing putative behavioral functions of the in-session verbal behavior of a therapist (e.g., discriminative, reinforcing, punishing, and motivational operations). The complete therapeutic process of a clinical case of an individual with marital problems was recorded (10 sessions, 8 hours), and data were arranged in a temporal sequence using 10-min periods. Hypotheses based on the expected performance of the putative behavioral functions portrayed by the SISC-INTER codes across prevalent clinical activities (i.e., assessing, explaining, Socratic method, providing clinical guidance) were tested using autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) models. Known-group validity analyses provided support to all hypotheses. The SISC-INTER may be a useful tool to describe therapist–client interaction in operant terms. The utility of reliable and valid protocols for the descriptive analysis of clinical practice in terms of verbal behavior is discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
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