Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis

Improved insight and affect expression have been associated with specific effects of transference work in psychodynamic psychotherapy. However, the micro-associations between these variables as they occur within the sessions have not been studied. The present study investigated whether the analyst’...

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Main Authors: Yasemin Sohtorik İlkmen, Sibel Halfon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2019-12-01
Series:Research in Psychotherapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.researchinpsychotherapy.org/index.php/rpsy/article/view/408
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spelling doaj-3e4a7abae8ea45f6aca4c82b3372ca862020-11-25T03:04:11ZengPAGEPress PublicationsResearch in Psychotherapy2499-75522239-80312019-12-0122310.4081/ripppo.2019.408Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysisYasemin Sohtorik İlkmen0Sibel Halfon1Department of Psychology, Boğaziçi University, Bebek, IstanbulDepartment of Psychology, Bilgi University, Istanbul Improved insight and affect expression have been associated with specific effects of transference work in psychodynamic psychotherapy. However, the micro-associations between these variables as they occur within the sessions have not been studied. The present study investigated whether the analyst’s transference interpretations predicted changes in a patient’s insight and emotion expression in her language during the course of a long-term psychoanalysis. 449 thematic units from 30 sessions coming from different years of psychoanalysis were coded by outside raters for analyst’s use of transference interpretations using Transference Work Scale, and patient’s insight, positive emotions, anger and sadness were calculated using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count System. Multilevel modeling analyses indicated that transference interpretations positively predicted patient’s insight and positive emotion words and negatively predicted anger and sadness. The qualitative micro-analyses of selected sessions showed that the opportunity to explore negative emotions within the transference relationship reduced the patient’s avoidance of such feelings, generated insight into negative relational patterns, and helped form more balanced representations of self and others that allowed for positive feelings. The findings were discussed for clinical implications and future research directions. https://www.researchinpsychotherapy.org/index.php/rpsy/article/view/408Transference interventions; Insight; Emotions; Empirical case study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yasemin Sohtorik İlkmen
Sibel Halfon
spellingShingle Yasemin Sohtorik İlkmen
Sibel Halfon
Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
Research in Psychotherapy
Transference interventions; Insight; Emotions; Empirical case study
author_facet Yasemin Sohtorik İlkmen
Sibel Halfon
author_sort Yasemin Sohtorik İlkmen
title Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
title_short Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
title_full Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
title_fullStr Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
title_full_unstemmed Transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
title_sort transference interpretations as predictors of increased insight and affect expression in a single case of long-term psychoanalysis
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Research in Psychotherapy
issn 2499-7552
2239-8031
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Improved insight and affect expression have been associated with specific effects of transference work in psychodynamic psychotherapy. However, the micro-associations between these variables as they occur within the sessions have not been studied. The present study investigated whether the analyst’s transference interpretations predicted changes in a patient’s insight and emotion expression in her language during the course of a long-term psychoanalysis. 449 thematic units from 30 sessions coming from different years of psychoanalysis were coded by outside raters for analyst’s use of transference interpretations using Transference Work Scale, and patient’s insight, positive emotions, anger and sadness were calculated using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count System. Multilevel modeling analyses indicated that transference interpretations positively predicted patient’s insight and positive emotion words and negatively predicted anger and sadness. The qualitative micro-analyses of selected sessions showed that the opportunity to explore negative emotions within the transference relationship reduced the patient’s avoidance of such feelings, generated insight into negative relational patterns, and helped form more balanced representations of self and others that allowed for positive feelings. The findings were discussed for clinical implications and future research directions.
topic Transference interventions; Insight; Emotions; Empirical case study
url https://www.researchinpsychotherapy.org/index.php/rpsy/article/view/408
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