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Increasing Empathic Accuracy Through Practice and Feedback in a Clinical Interviewing Course

Authors :
Howard L. Traub
Joan T. Cooper
David F. Barone
Philinda S. Hutchings
Christine M. Marshall
Heather J. Kimmel
Source :
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology. 24:156-171
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Guilford Publications, 2005.

Abstract

Accurate empathy, long argued to be important in psychotherapy, now is an object of social–cognitive research. Graduate–level psychology students viewed brief portions of a therapy session and inferred the thoughts and feelings of the client. Accuracy scores were the rated similarity of their inferences to the client's reported thoughts and feelings. Throughout the semester course in interviewing, experimental participants practiced such judgments with feedback, while controls did not. Both groups' accuracy increased from pre– to post-test on inferred feelings, in part because the post-test was easier. Nonetheless, experimental participants on the post-test had greater accuracy of inferred feelings than controls. Women were more accurate than men in inferences for thoughts at post-test. Implications for training and future research are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
07367236
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ea57f21f739e95a895b342ccd6cfb41e