The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. ex. Some numerals are expressed as "XNUMX".
Copyrights notice
The original paper is in English. Non-English content has been machine-translated and may contain typographical errors or mistranslations. Copyrights notice
A sincronia dos movimentos corporais (ou seja, a sincronização rítmica entre os movimentos corporais dos parceiros em interação) foi descrita por impressões subjetivas de conselheiros qualificados e foi considerada como um reflexo da profundidade do relacionamento cliente-conselheiro. Este estudo analisou mudanças temporais na sincronia dos movimentos corporais por meio de uma análise de vídeo de diálogos cliente-conselheiro em sessões de aconselhamento. Foram analisadas quatro sessões de aconselhamento psicoterapêutico com duração de 50 minutos, incluindo duas sessões avaliadas negativamente (grupos de baixa avaliação) e duas sessões avaliadas positivamente (grupos de alta avaliação). Além disso, foram analisadas duas sessões ordinárias de aconselhamento de 50 minutos entre dois professores do ensino médio e os clientes do grupo de alta classificação. Todas as sessões representam role-playing. A intensidade do movimento corporal dos participantes foi medida por meio de um sistema baseado em vídeo. A mudança temporal da sincronia do movimento corporal foi analisada usando correlações móveis da intensidade entre as duas séries temporais. Os resultados revelaram (1) um padrão temporal consistente entre os quatro casos de aconselhamento, embora os coeficientes de correlação móvel tenham sido maiores para o grupo de avaliação alta do que para o grupo de avaliação baixa e (2) padrões temporais diferentes para as sessões de aconselhamento e aconselhamento, mesmo quando os clientes nós somos iguais. Esses resultados foram discutidos sob a perspectiva da qualidade do relacionamento cliente-conselheiro.
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Chika NAGAOKA, Masashi KOMORI, "Body Movement Synchrony in Psychotherapeutic Counseling: A Study Using the Video-Based Quantification Method" in IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information,
vol. E91-D, no. 6, pp. 1634-1640, June 2008, doi: 10.1093/ietisy/e91-d.6.1634.
Abstract: Body movement synchrony (i.e. rhythmic synchronization between the body movements of interacting partners) has been described by subjective impressions of skilled counselors and has been considered to reflect the depth of the client-counselor relationship. This study analyzed temporal changes in body movement synchrony through a video analysis of client-counselor dialogues in counseling sessions. Four 50-minute psychotherapeutic counseling sessions were analyzed, including two negatively evaluated sessions (low evaluation groups) and two positively evaluated sessions (high evaluation groups). In addition, two 50-minute ordinary advice sessions between two high school teachers and the clients in the high rating group were analyzed. All sessions represent role-playing. The intensity of the participants' body movement was measured using a video-based system. Temporal change of body movement synchrony was analyzed using moving correlations of the intensity between the two time series. The results revealed (1) A consistent temporal pattern among the four counseling cases, though the moving correlation coefficients were higher for the high evaluation group than the low evaluation group and (2) Different temporal patterns for the counseling and advice sessions even when the clients were the same. These results were discussed from the perspective of the quality of client-counselor relationship.
URL: https://global.ieice.org/en_transactions/information/10.1093/ietisy/e91-d.6.1634/_p
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@ARTICLE{e91-d_6_1634,
author={Chika NAGAOKA, Masashi KOMORI, },
journal={IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information},
title={Body Movement Synchrony in Psychotherapeutic Counseling: A Study Using the Video-Based Quantification Method},
year={2008},
volume={E91-D},
number={6},
pages={1634-1640},
abstract={Body movement synchrony (i.e. rhythmic synchronization between the body movements of interacting partners) has been described by subjective impressions of skilled counselors and has been considered to reflect the depth of the client-counselor relationship. This study analyzed temporal changes in body movement synchrony through a video analysis of client-counselor dialogues in counseling sessions. Four 50-minute psychotherapeutic counseling sessions were analyzed, including two negatively evaluated sessions (low evaluation groups) and two positively evaluated sessions (high evaluation groups). In addition, two 50-minute ordinary advice sessions between two high school teachers and the clients in the high rating group were analyzed. All sessions represent role-playing. The intensity of the participants' body movement was measured using a video-based system. Temporal change of body movement synchrony was analyzed using moving correlations of the intensity between the two time series. The results revealed (1) A consistent temporal pattern among the four counseling cases, though the moving correlation coefficients were higher for the high evaluation group than the low evaluation group and (2) Different temporal patterns for the counseling and advice sessions even when the clients were the same. These results were discussed from the perspective of the quality of client-counselor relationship.},
keywords={},
doi={10.1093/ietisy/e91-d.6.1634},
ISSN={1745-1361},
month={June},}
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TY - JOUR
TI - Body Movement Synchrony in Psychotherapeutic Counseling: A Study Using the Video-Based Quantification Method
T2 - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information
SP - 1634
EP - 1640
AU - Chika NAGAOKA
AU - Masashi KOMORI
PY - 2008
DO - 10.1093/ietisy/e91-d.6.1634
JO - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information
SN - 1745-1361
VL - E91-D
IS - 6
JA - IEICE TRANSACTIONS on Information
Y1 - June 2008
AB - Body movement synchrony (i.e. rhythmic synchronization between the body movements of interacting partners) has been described by subjective impressions of skilled counselors and has been considered to reflect the depth of the client-counselor relationship. This study analyzed temporal changes in body movement synchrony through a video analysis of client-counselor dialogues in counseling sessions. Four 50-minute psychotherapeutic counseling sessions were analyzed, including two negatively evaluated sessions (low evaluation groups) and two positively evaluated sessions (high evaluation groups). In addition, two 50-minute ordinary advice sessions between two high school teachers and the clients in the high rating group were analyzed. All sessions represent role-playing. The intensity of the participants' body movement was measured using a video-based system. Temporal change of body movement synchrony was analyzed using moving correlations of the intensity between the two time series. The results revealed (1) A consistent temporal pattern among the four counseling cases, though the moving correlation coefficients were higher for the high evaluation group than the low evaluation group and (2) Different temporal patterns for the counseling and advice sessions even when the clients were the same. These results were discussed from the perspective of the quality of client-counselor relationship.
ER -