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Highways to happiness for ASD adults? Perceived causal relations among clinicians

Authors :
Deserno, M.K.
Borsboom, D.
Begeer, S.M.
Bork, R. van
Hinne, M.
Geurts, H.M.
Deserno, M.K.
Borsboom, D.
Begeer, S.M.
Bork, R. van
Hinne, M.
Geurts, H.M.
Source :
PLoS One; 1932-6203; 12; vol. 15; e0243298; ~PLoS One~~~~~1932-6203~12~15~~e0243298
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 227529.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)<br />The network approach to psychological phenomena advances our understanding of the interrelations between autism and well-being. We use the Perceived Causal Relations methodology in order to (i) identify perceived causal pathways in the well-being system, (ii) validate networks based on self-report data, and (iii) quantify and integrate clinical expertise in autism research. Trained clinicians served as raters (N = 29) completing 374 cause-effects ratings of 34 variables on well-being and symptomatology. A subgroup (N = 16) of raters chose intervention targets in the resulting network which we found to match the respective centrality of nodes. Clinicians' perception of causal relations was similar to the interrelatedness found in self-reported client data (N = 323). We present a useful tool for translating clinical expertise into quantitative information enabling future research to integrate this in scientific studies.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
PLoS One; 1932-6203; 12; vol. 15; e0243298; ~PLoS One~~~~~1932-6203~12~15~~e0243298
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284106738
Document Type :
Electronic Resource