21 results on '"Avdi E."'
Search Results
2. Understanding political participation in media discourses: A Social Representations approach
- Author
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Mannarini T., Buhagiar L., Rochira A., Avdi E., Koutri I., Mylona A., Sammut G., Salvatore S, Mannarini, T., Buhagiar, L., Rochira, A., Avdi, E., Koutri, I., Mylona, A., Sammut, G., amp, and Salvatore, S
- Published
- 2020
3. Distribution and Characteristics of Symbolic Universes over European Societies
- Author
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Salvatore S., Avdi E., Battaglia F., Bernal-Marcos M. J., Buhagiar L. J., Ciavolino E., Fini., V. Kadianaki, I. Kullasepp, K. Mannarini, T. Matsopoulos, Mossi P., Rochira A., Sammut G., Santarpia A., Veltri G. A., S. Salvatore, V. Fini, T. Mannarini, J. Valsiner, G.A. Veltri (Eds., Salvatore, S., Avdi, E., Battaglia, F., Bernal-Marcos, M. J., Buhagiar, L. J., Ciavolino, E., Fin, I., V., Kadianaki, I., Kullasepp, K., Mannarini, T., Matsopoulo, Mossi, P., Rochira, A., Sammut, G., Santarpia, A., and Veltri, G. A.
- Published
- 2019
4. Symbolic Universes and (Post)Crisis Scenarios
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Salvatore S., Mannarini T., Avdi E., Battaglia F., Cremaschi M., Forges Davanzati, G. Fini, V. Kadianaki, I. Krasteva, A. Kullasepp, K. Matsopoulos, A. Mølholm, M. Rozlyn, Rochira A., Russo F., Sammut G., Santarpia A., Valmorbida A., Veltri G. A., S. Salvatore, V. Fini, T. Mannarini, J. Valsiner, G.A. Veltri (Eds.), Salvatore, S., Mannarini, T., Avdi, E., Battaglia, F., Cremaschi, M., Forges, Davanzati, Fini, G., V., Kadianaki, I., Krasteva, A., Kullasepp, K., Matsopoulo, A., Mølholm, M., Rozlyn, Rochira, A., Russo, F., Sammut, G., Santarpia, A., Valmorbida, A., and Veltri, G. A.
- Subjects
symbolic universes - Published
- 2019
5. Evaluating the therapeutic use of photocards in European prisons
- Author
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Loewenthal, D. Avdi, E. Chauhan, G. Saita, E. Natri, T. Righi, R. Tompea, A. Giordmaina, J. Issari, P.
- Abstract
This paper focuses on the evaluation of the therapeutic use of photocards by prisoners and facilitators in a counselling psychology led European project, based on responses to open-ended questionnaires. It is part of a wider project, involving seven partner organisations in six European countries (England, Finland, Greece, Italy, Malta and Romania), which developed and trialled four different approaches to using photography in the context of counselling in prisons. Of the 51 inmates that participated in the project, 48 (94%) completed the questionnaires; of those, 39 (77%) were available for individual analysis due to prison restrictions in one partner organisation only allowing group data. Of those 39, who returned their completed questionnaires, over 92% found the therapeutic use of photographs either very helpful (56.4%) or helpful (35.9%), and the remaining 7.7% described it as average. From the thematic analysis, main themes emerging regarding inmates’ experiences of working with photocards were that it: facilitates emotional expression and sharing; unlocks memories and reconnects with life outside; fosters insight, reflection and self-growth; breaks the monotony of prison life and, overall aids emotional learning. A thematic analysis of 11 psychological therapists/facilitators’ perspectives showed that the use of photocards: gives clients a voice; provides a safe and collaborative frame and a therapeutic relationship; and, provides a useful icebreaker, helpfully overcoming anxieties of both client and psychotherapist/facilitator. Overall, photocards were considered useful as their projective nature can help facilitate prisoners’ strong need for expression in a context where there are limited opportunities and trust is fragile. © 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
- Published
- 2017
6. Evaluating the therapeutic use of photocards in European prisons
- Author
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Loewenthal, D, Avdi, E, Chauhan, G, Saita, Emanuela, Natri, T, Righi, R, Tompea, A, Giordmaina, J, Issari, P., Saita, Emanuela (ORCID:0000-0003-0790-2819), Loewenthal, D, Avdi, E, Chauhan, G, Saita, Emanuela, Natri, T, Righi, R, Tompea, A, Giordmaina, J, Issari, P., and Saita, Emanuela (ORCID:0000-0003-0790-2819)
- Abstract
This paper focuses on the evaluation of the therapeutic use of photocards by prisoners and facilitators in a counselling psychology led European project, based on responses to open-ended questionnaires. It is part of a wider project, involving seven partner organisations in six European countries (England, Fin-land, Greece, Italy, Malta and Romania), which developed and trialled four different approaches to using photography in the context of counselling in prisons. Of the 51 inmates that participated in the project, 48 (94%) com-pleted the questionnaires; of those, 39 (77%) were available for individual analysis due to prison restrictions in one partner organisation only allowing group data. Of those 39, who returned their completed questionnaires, over 92% found the therapeutic use of photographs either very helpful (56.4%) or helpful (35.9%), and the remaining 7.7% described it as average. From the thematic analysis, main themes emerging regarding inmates’ experiences of working with photocards were that it: facilitates emotional expression and sharing; unlocks memories and reconnects with life outside; fosters insight, reflection and self-growth; breaks the monotony of prison life and, overall aids emotional learning. A thematic analysis of 11 psychological therapists/facilita-tors’ perspectives showed that the use of photocards: gives clients a voice; provides a safe and collaborative frame and a therapeutic relationship; and, provides a useful icebreaker, helpfully overcoming anxieties of both client and psychotherapist/facilitator. Overall, photocards were considered useful as their projective nature can help facilitate prisoners’ strong need for expression in a context where there are limited opportunities and trust is fragile.
- Published
- 2017
7. Giant Magnetothermopower and giant magnetoresistance in molecular beam epitaxy grown Co/Cu(111) superlattices
- Author
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Avdi, E., Hickey, B.J., Greig, D., Howson, M.A., Hall, M.J., Xu, J., Walker, M.J., Wiser, N., and Groot, P. de
- Subjects
Superlattices as materials -- Research ,Epitaxy -- Research ,Magnetization -- Research ,Physics - Abstract
Giant magnetothemopower (GMT) and giant magnetoresistance (GMR) in Co/Cu(111) superlattices grown by molecular beam epitaxy were investigated. The results showed that GMT had a maximum value of 14% for a Cu thickness of 9 angstroms. The maximum GMR was measured at -26% at a thickness of 7 angstroms. In addition, oscillations of approximately 10 angstroms in the remnant magnetization and the saturation field were present.
- Published
- 1993
8. Negotiating a pathological identity in the clinical dialogue: discourse analysis of a family therapy.
- Author
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Avdi E
- Abstract
Within the framework of social constructionism, psychotherapy has been re-conceptualized as a semiotic process, which consists of the creative generation of new meanings in the context of collaborative discourse. In recent years, research approaches that draw from social constructionism, such as discourse analysis, have been fruitfully employed in the study of psychotherapy processes, whilst being in line with the contemporary emphasis on language, narrative, and meaning making. This paper aims to further the exploration of the usefulness of discourse analysis in the study of psychotherapy processes, and in particular, in situations where the medical discourse is powerfully implicated in the construction of a person's identity. It is based on the analysis of a family therapy with a family whose child has a diagnosis of autism. The analysis focuses on two features of the family's talk, namely shifts in the flexibility of employment of a diverse range of discourses and subject positions, and shifts in the ways agency is constructed and discursively negotiated in the clinical conversations. It is suggested that these shifts can be used as indications of change in the family's network of meanings. The analysis suggests that an important aspect in clinical work with families with a member with a psychiatric diagnosis lies in decentring, or deconstructing, the dominant, pathology-maintaining accounts, and allowing for a wider range of less problematic narratives and subject positions to emerge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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9. Understanding political participation in media discourse: A social representations approach
- Author
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Mannarini, T., Buhagiar, L. J., Alessia Rochira, Avdi, E., Koutri, I., Mylona, A., Sammut, G., and Salvatore, S.
- Subjects
Political participation ,Populism ,Political participation -- Italy -- In mass media ,Southern Europe ,Political participation -- Italy -- Press coverage ,Political participation -- Social aspects ,Media analysis ,Social representations ,Political participation -- Greece -- Press coverage ,Political participation -- Greece -- In mass media - Abstract
Various forms of political participation are found in democratic societies, and these are diversifying at a steady pace. Scholarly literature presents us with an array of typologies of participation, some of which were conceived theoretically, and others derived from empirical research. This paper studies how political participation surfaces in media discourse in Italy and Greece. Specifically, it seeks to understand the social representations of political participation in both countries between 2000 and 2015, and to see which typologies of political participation are reflected in such representations. A media analysis was carried out on a sizeable corpus of newspaper articles in both countries. Data were analysed using a combination of correspondence and cluster analysis. The results indicate higher internal differentiation and gradualness characterising the social representations of political participation in the Italian corpus. In Greece, there was the presence of more radical ideological alternatives to electoral participation. Moreover, results indicate temporal stability in the themes pertaining to political participation over the years. The main contribution of this paper lies in showing that content pertaining to various typologies of political participation (e.g., relating to influence, in/formality and protest) features in the social representations of political participation in newspaper media. Findings are discussed in view of the temporal distribution of representational content, and by comparing country-specific typologies (for Italy and Greece) with those present in the literature., peer-reviewed
10. Exploring silence in psychoanalytic theory and clinical work
- Author
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Acheson, Rachel Alice and Avdi, E.
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616.89 - Abstract
Psychotherapy process research is important in developing technique and enhancing clinical skills. Silence, as an aspect of child and adolescent psychoanalytic psychotherapy, has been a neglected area of research, despite it being acknowledged as an often challenging yet therapeutically useful aspect of the work. This study aims to explore silence in adolescent psychoanalytic psychotherapy, by studying the emergence of silence in therapy sessions and the adolescents' views. Three Short Term Psychoanalytic Psychotherapies of adolescents with depression were sampled, and silences occurring in six sessions of each therapy were coded using the Pausing Inventory Categorization System (PICS). The study identified that in the three therapies sampled, on average almost one-third of session time was spent in silence, and that most of this silence was coded as 'obstructive'. The study also found that the change in silence amount through each stage of therapy was different in each patient-therapist dyad. Follow-up interviews conducted with the adolescents were analysed using thematic analysis and found that the adolescents expressed negative feelings about silence in their therapy. Findings from the follow-up interviews were related to silence and outcome data to suggest processes that may have been taking place in each of the therapies. A key hypothesis was that the majority of the silence in the therapies sampled appeared to relate to conflict, which could be viewed as both an aspect of the developmental stage of adolescence, and a symptom of depression. Clinical implications of the findings indicated that long silence do not appear to be useful in adolescent therapy in the way they are considered to be in adult therapy, and so adaptation of therapeutic technique is required.
- Published
- 2020
11. The Cultural Milieu and the Symbolic Universes of European societies
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Alfonso Santarpia, Alessia Rochira, Anastassios Matsopoulos, Marcos José Bernal-Marcos, Antonella Valmorbida, Katrin Kullasepp, Enrico Ciavolino, Giuseppe Veltri, Terri Mannarini, Luke Joseph Buhagiar, Viviana Fini, Sergio Salvatore, Irini Kadianaki, Evrinomy Avdi, Fiorella Battaglia, Gordon Sammut, Piergiorgio Mossi, Università del Salento [Lecce], Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Ludwig Maximilian University [Munich] (LMU), Universidad Estatal a Distancia (UNED), University of Malta [Malta], University of Salento [Lecce], University of Cyprus [Nicosia] (UCY), Tallinn University, University of Crete [Heraklion] (UOC), Laboratoire de psychologie clinique, de psychopathologie et de psychanalyse (LPCPP), Aix Marseille Université (AMU), University of Trento [Trento], European Project: 649436,H2020,H2020-EURO-SOCIETY-2014,Re.Cri.Re.(2015), University of Cyprus (UCY), Salvatore, S., Avdi, E., Battaglia, F., Bernal-Marcos, M. J., Buhagiar, L. J., Ciavolino, E., Fin, I., V., Kadianaki, I., Kullasepp, K., Mannarini, Matsopoulos, A., Mossi, P., Rochira, A., Sammut, G., Santarpia, A., Veltri, G. A., and Valmorbida, A.
- Subjects
[SHS.STAT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Methods and statistics ,Field (Bourdieu) ,[SCCO.NEUR]Cognitive science/Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Symbolic universes ,[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology ,050109 social psychology ,Gender studies ,Sample (statistics) ,Interpersonal communication ,Belongingness ,[SCCO.LING]Cognitive science/Linguistics ,[SHS.ANTHRO-SE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Social Anthropology and ethnology ,050105 experimental psychology ,[SHS.RELIG]Humanities and Social Sciences/Religions ,Multiple correspondence analysis ,[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology ,Semiotics ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,The Symbolic ,[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics ,Connotation - Abstract
This chapter is an extended version of the paper: Salvatore et al. (2018a). Symbolic universes between present and future of Europe. First results of the map of European societies’ cultural milieu. PLoS ONE 13(1): e0189885. With respect to that work, the current chapter presents an extension of the levels of analysis (i.e. the detection of the lines of semiotic force) and a more comprehensive sample (i.e. the inclusion of Dutch and Danish subsamples).; International audience; The chapter reports the main findings of an analysis of cultural milieus of a sample of 11 European countries (Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Malta, Netherlands, Spain, United Kingdom). The analysis is based on a questionnaire (View of Context—VOC) applied to a sample built through a two-step procedure of post-hoc random selection from a broader dataset based on an online survey. According to the methodological framework outlined in the previous chapter, responses to the questionnaire were subjected to multidimensional analysis—a combination of Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Cluster Analysis. We identified three fundamental dimensions of meanings, interpreted as lines of semiotic forces comprising the semiotic field of European societies: Affective connotation of the world—foe versus friend; Direction of desire—passivity versus engagement; Form of demand—demand for systemic resources versus demand for community bond. Moreover, 5 symbolic universes were mapped. Each symbolic universe corresponds to a basic, embodied, affect-laden, generalized worldview: People in this study see the world as either (a) an ordered universe; (b) a matter of interpersonal bond; (c) a caring society; (d) consisting of a niche of belongingness; (e) a hostile place (others’ world).
- Published
- 2019
12. Observing and interpreting clinical process: Methods and findings from 'Layered analysis' of parent-infant psychotherapy.
- Author
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Baradon T, Avdi E, Sleed M, Salomonsson B, and Amiran K
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Psychotherapy methods, Countertransference, Allied Health Personnel, Parents, Psychoanalytic Therapy methods, Psychoanalysis
- Abstract
This paper describes a method for investigating clinical process, Layered Analysis, which combines therapist countertransference reports and multi-faceted microanalytic research approaches. Findings from the application of Layered Analysis to video-recorded micro-events of rupture and repair in four psychoanalytic parent-infant psychotherapy sessions are presented. Layered analysis showed that countertransference and observation are complementary perspectives, which enable concomitant study of interactive events, conscious internal experiences, as well as nonconscious and unconscious elements of therapeutic interaction. Interactional rupture and repair were found to constitute co-constructed micro-events that occurred fleetingly and often implicitly, and differed in the structure, coherence and flow of interactions and in the relationship between verbal and nonverbal communication. Furthermore, interactional ruptures were found to sometimes 'get into' the therapist and transiently disrupt their self-organization, such that the therapist became a locus of disruption for the patient(s), actively contributing to the rupture, which thus became embedded in the therapeutic system. Interactive repair was found to be most often initiated by the therapist and to be underpinned by the therapist re-establishing self-regulation, through metabolizing embodied and verbal aspects of the rupture. Studying such processes can enhance our understanding of clinical process, inform therapist training and clinical supervision, and contribute to clinical outcomes., (© 2023 The Authors. Infant Mental Health Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
- Published
- 2023
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13. Studying Physiological Synchrony in Couple Therapy through Partial Directed Coherence: Associations with the Therapeutic Alliance and Meaning Construction.
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Avdi E, Paraskevopoulos E, Lagogianni C, Kartsidis P, and Plaskasovitis F
- Abstract
In line with the growing recognition of the role of embodiment, affect and implicit processes in psychotherapy, several recent studies examine the role of physiological synchrony in the process and outcome of psychotherapy. This study aims to introduce Partial Directed Coherence (PDC) as a novel approach to calculating psychophysiological synchrony and examine its potential to contribute to our understanding of the therapy process. The study adopts a single-case, mixed-method design and examines physiological synchrony in one-couple therapy in relation to the therapeutic alliance and a narrative analysis of meaning construction in the sessions. Interpersonal Physiological Synchrony (IPS) was calculated, via a windowed approach, through PDC of a Heart Rate Variability-derived physiological index, which was measured in the third and penultimate sessions. Our mixed-method analysis shows that PDC quantified significant moments of IPS within and across the sessions, modeling the characteristics of interpersonal interaction as well as the effects of therapy on the interactional dynamics. The findings of this study point to the complex interplay between explicit and implicit levels of interaction and the potential contribution of including physiological synchrony in the study of interactional processes in psychotherapy.
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- 2022
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14. Exploring Conversational and Physiological Aspects of Psychotherapy Talk.
- Author
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Avdi E and Evans C
- Abstract
This study is part of a larger exploration of 'talk and cure' that combines the examination of talk-in-interaction with nonverbal displays and measurements of the client's and therapist's autonomic arousal during therapy sessions. A key assumption of the study is that psychotherapy entails processes of intersubjective meaning-making that occur across different modalities and take place in both verbal/explicit and nonverbal/implicit domains. A single session of a psychodynamic psychotherapy is analyzed with a focus on the expression and management of affect, with an aim to describe key interactive events that promote change in both semantic and procedural domains. The clinical dialog is analyzed discursively, with a focus on the conversational processes through which new meanings are jointly constructed and affective states shared; detailed attention is paid to nonverbal displays of affiliation and affect. Furthermore, we explore whether the interactional patterns implicated in joint meaning-making, as revealed by analyzing the therapeutic conversation, have correlates in the autonomic arousal of the two protagonists, as reflected in their heart rates. Conversation analysis has still untapped potential to illuminate interactional patterns that underlie the practice of psychotherapy. In this exploratory study we suggest that discursive analyses of talk-in-interaction can be enriched through detailed focus on nonverbal displays as well as measures of physiological arousal. Drawing upon the analysis, we suggest that bringing the methodological strengths of language-based analysis into fertile dialog with embodied quantitative data can help our explorations of what's really going on in psychotherapy., (Copyright © 2020 Avdi and Evans.)
- Published
- 2020
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15. Studying the process of psychoanalytic parent-infant psychotherapy: Embodied and discursive aspects.
- Author
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Avdi E, Amiran K, Baradon T, Broughton C, Sleed M, Spencer R, and Shai D
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Pilot Projects, Mother-Child Relations, Psychoanalytic Therapy methods, Psychotherapeutic Processes
- Abstract
This paper presents findings from an intensive, mixed methods case study of one session of psychoanalytic parent-infant psychotherapy (PPIP) addressing early relational trauma, and aims to shed light on the multimodal interactive processes that take place in the moment-to-moment exchanges comprising the therapeutic encounter. Different research methods were used on video material from PPIP sessions, including microanalysis of adult-infant interactions, discourse analysis of talk, and coding systems developed to study parent-infant interaction. These different perspectives were brought together with the clinical narrative to illuminate the complex, dynamic processes of parent-infant-therapist interaction. More specifically, the detailed analysis of one interactive episode revealed brief behavioral manifestations of fearful and disoriented states of mind, reflecting dysregulated interaction between mother and infant, which also powerfully affected the therapist. The processes through which the therapist gradually resolves this rupture are also described in detail. Through this pilot study, we were able to show that it is possible to systematically study the process of PPIP. The study contributes to the growing psychotherapy research literature that takes into account both the verbal domain and implicit, interactional processes in therapeutic practice, and underscores the therapist's comprehensive engagement in the therapeutic process., (© 2020 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.)
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Correction: Symbolic universes between present and future of Europe. First results of the map of European societies' cultural milieu.
- Author
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Salvatore S, Fini V, Mannarini T, Veltri GA, Avdi E, Battaglia F, Castro-Tejerina J, Ciavolino E, Cremaschi M, Kadianaki I, Kharlamov NA, Krasteva A, Kullasepp K, Matsopoulos A, Meschiari C, Mossi P, Psinas P, Redd R, Rochira A, Santarpia A, Sammut G, Valsiner J, and Valmorbida A
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0189885.].
- Published
- 2018
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17. Symbolic universes between present and future of Europe. First results of the map of European societies' cultural milieu.
- Author
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Salvatore S, Fini V, Mannarini T, Veltri GA, Avdi E, Battaglia F, Castro-Tejerina J, Ciavolino E, Cremaschi M, Kadianaki I, Kharlamov NA, Krasteva A, Kullasepp K, Matsopoulos A, Meschiari C, Mossi P, Psinas P, Redd R, Rochira A, Santarpia A, Sammut G, Valsiner J, and Valmorbida A
- Subjects
- Cluster Analysis, Europe, Forecasting, Models, Psychological, Culture
- Abstract
This paper reports the framework, method and main findings of an analysis of cultural milieus in 4 European countries (Estonia, Greece, Italy, and UK). The analysis is based on a questionnaire applied to a sample built through a two-step procedure of post-hoc random selection from a broader dataset based on an online survey. Responses to the questionnaire were subjected to multidimensional analysis-a combination of Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Cluster Analysis. We identified 5 symbolic universes, that correspond to basic, embodied, affect-laden, generalized worldviews. People in this study see the world as either a) an ordered universe; b) a matter of interpersonal bond; c) a caring society; d) consisting of a niche of belongingness; e) a hostile place (others' world). These symbolic universes were also interpreted as semiotic capital: they reflect the capacity of a place to foster social and civic development. Moreover, the distribution of the symbolic universes, and therefore social and civic engagement, is demonstrated to be variable across the 4 countries in the analysis. Finally, we develop a retrospective reconstruction of the distribution of symbolic universes as well as the interplay between their current state and past, present and future socio-institutional scenarios.
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- 2018
- Full Text
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18. Shifts in subjectivity during the therapy for psychosis.
- Author
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Karatza H and Avdi E
- Subjects
- Adult, Communication, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Narration, Psychotherapy, Self Psychology, Family Health, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Psychotic Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: This paper examines the process of therapy with families in which a member has a diagnosis of psychosis. On a methodological level, the study aims to demonstrate the usefulness of discourse analysis as a method for analysing texts produced in therapy in the context of process research. On a clinical and theoretical level, it aims to contribute to the literature that approaches psychosis and its treatment from the viewpoint of narrative and discourse., Design: Several contemporary conceptualizations emphasize the role of discursive processes, such as a collapse of meaning and narrative and an alienation from shared communicative practices, in psychosis. Drawing from this perspective, discourse analysis was used on family therapy session transcripts to empirically examine these processes. Moreover, given that in different conceptualizations psychosis is seen to entail a profound disturbance to the person's sense of self, the analysis focuses more specifically on the identified patients' subjectivity., Methods: Seven sessions were analysed, drawn from the beginning, middle, and end phases of two therapies with families with a member with a diagnosis of psychosis. Discourse analysis was used and the analysis focused on the transformation of meaning and more specifically on shifts in the subject positions occupied by the identified patient in the clinical dialogue., Results: With regards to the identified patients' subjectivity, the analysis suggests that (a) psychosis was associated with the 'patient' being rigidly positioned exclusively through the psychiatric discourse in the first case and the lack of a voice in the second, and (b) that therapeutic change was associated with increased flexibility in the subject positions that the identified patient occupied in the first case and with the emergence of a personal and reflective voice in the second., Conclusions: The findings in this study suggest that an important aspect in clinical work with families with a member with a diagnosis of psychosis relates to de-centring the dominant, pathology maintaining accounts and to the emergence of a wider range of less problematic explanatory frames., (©2010 The British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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19. Narrative research in psychotherapy: a critical review.
- Author
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Avdi E and Georgaca E
- Subjects
- Humans, Narration, Psychotherapy, Research
- Abstract
Purpose: This paper is a review of studies which utilise the notion of narrative to analyse psychotherapy. Its purpose is to systematically present this diverse field of research, to highlight common themes and divergences between different strands and to further the development and integration of narrative research in psychotherapy., Methods: The paper reviews studies which employ an applied textual analysis of narratives produced in the context of psychotherapy. Criteria for inclusion of studies are, firstly, the analysis of therapeutic and therapy-related texts and, secondly, the adoption of a narrative psychological perspective. The studies were examined on the basis of the notion of narrative they employ and the aspects of client narratives they focus on, and were grouped accordingly in the review., Results: The majority of the studies reviewed assume a constructivist approach to narrative, adopt a representational view of language, focus primarily on client micro-narratives and relate to cognitive-constructivist and process-experiential psychotherapeutic approaches. A smaller group of studies assume a social constructionist approach to narrative and a functional view of language, focus on micro-narratives, highlight the interactional and wider social aspects of narrative and relate to postmodern trends in psychotherapy., Conclusions: The range of conceptualisations of narrative in the studies reviewed, from a representational psychological view to a constructionist social view, reflects tensions within narrative psychology itself. Moreover, two trends can be discerned in the field reviewed, narrative analysis of therapy, which draws from narrative theory and utilises the analytic approaches of narrative research to study psychotherapy, and analyses of narrative in therapy, which study client narratives using non-narrative qualitative methods. Finally, the paper highlights the need for integration of this diverse field of research and urges for the development of narrative studies of psychotherapy which employ a broader social understanding of narrative production and transformation.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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20. Parents' constructions of professional knowledge, expertise and authority during assessment and diagnosis of their child for an autistic spectrum disorder.
- Author
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Avdi E, Griffin C, and Brough S
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Male, Professional-Family Relations, Attitude, Autistic Disorder diagnosis, Parents, Professional Competence
- Abstract
This paper presents a discourse analysis of parents' talk about the knowledge, expertise and authority of professionals, during assessment and diagnosis of their child for an autistic spectrum disorder at a Child Development Centre. Focusing on the positional level of analysis, it was suggested that parents' constructions of professional expertise and authority were inherently ambivalent and at times contradictory. It was further argued that this ambivalence is also reflected in an ideological dilemma between equality and expertise, regarding the role and positioning of 'human relations experts'. Discourse analysis was found to be a particularly useful tool in investigating aspects of the parents' talk relating to authority, knowledge and expertise. It is suggested that acknowledging this ambivalence and scrutinizing one's assumptions and practice, rather than denying the authoritarian aspects of health care, would provide the basis for more ethical and respectful clinical practice.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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21. Parents' Constructions of the 'Problem' during Assessment and Diagnosis of their Child for an Autistic Spectrum Disorder.
- Author
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Avdi E, Griffin C, and Brough S
- Abstract
The majority of studies on the effects of a diagnosis of learning disability in the family have employed traditional 'loss' and 'stress reaction' paradigms. In contrast to this approach, the current analysis employed a form of discourse analysis to explore the ways in which parents represented the 'problem' during the process of assessment of their child for an autistic spectrum disorder. The analysis suggested that parents employed three main discourses in their talk about the 'problem', which were termed the discourse of normal development, the medical discourse and the discourse of disability. The ways in which these discourses were used in constructing the 'problem', their relationship to each other and the discursive work underlying the diagnosis are discussed. Although this study focused on the specific case of autism, it is suggested that the findings could inform thinking around the complex ways in which medical diagnosis is constructed by families and extend our understanding of this important aspect of health care practice.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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