Psychotherapeutic Attraction
Pergamon General Psychology Series
- 260 pages
- English
- PDF
- Only available on web
About This Book
Psychotherapeutic Attraction is an experimental study that focuses on gauging whether the effects of relationship and attraction between therapist and patient are potent when it comes to psychotherapy, as both theory and research suggests. The book is not limited to the relationship between therapist and patient, as it also includes clinical reports of successful ""treatment"" of patients by diverse paraprofessionals and lay people. The book includes a short introduction of the psychotherapeutic relationship and interpersonal attraction; an analysis of direct structuring, trait structuring, and therapist structuring to the relationship of the therapist and patient as well as the effectiveness of therapy; and the effects of relationship and attraction in matching, modeling, and role-playing. The book is meant for psychotherapists, psychologists, and psychology undergraduates who wish to know if relationship, interaction, attraction, transference and co-transference between therapists, patients, and the people around them effect the therapy, as well as those who wish to improve current psychotherapy practices or seek alternative ones.
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Table of contents
- Front Cover
- Psychotherapeutic Attraction
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- Acknowledgment
- Chapter I. Introduction
- Chapter II. Direct Structuring
- Chapter III. Trait Structuring
- Chapter IV. Therapist Structuring
- Chapter V. Therapist Status
- Chapter VI. Effort
- Chapter VII. Interaction Effects: Structuring-Status-Effort
- Chapter VIII. Modeling
- Chapter IX. Matching
- Chapter Χ. Role Playing
- Chapter XI. Group Cohesiveness
- Chapter XII. Summary
- Appendices
- Author Index
- Subject Index