articleJournal of Consulting and Clinical PsychologyJan 1, 2011Closed access

Nonverbal synchrony in psychotherapy: Coordinated body movement reflects relationship quality and outcome.

University of Bern

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

The authors quantified nonverbal synchrony--the coordination of patient's and therapist's movement--in a random sample of same-sex psychotherapy dyads. The authors contrasted nonverbal synchrony in these dyads with a control condition and assessed its association with session-level and overall psychotherapy outcome. METHOD: Using an automated objective video analysis algorithm (Motion Energy Analysis; MEA), the authors calculated nonverbal synchrony in (n = 104) videotaped psychotherapy sessions from 70 Caucasian patients (37 women, 33 men, mean age = 36.5 years, SD = 10.2) treated at an outpatient psychotherapy clinic. The sample was randomly drawn from an archive (N = 301) of routinely videotaped psychotherapies. Patients and their therapists assessed session impact with self-report post-session questionnaires. A battery of pre- and postsymptomatology questionnaires measured therapy effectiveness.

Results

The authors found that nonverbal synchrony is higher in genuine interactions contrasted with pseudointeractions (a control condition generated by a specifically designed shuffling procedure). Furthermore, nonverbal synchrony is associated with session-level process as well as therapy outcome: It is increased in sessions rated by patients as manifesting high relationship quality and in patients experiencing high self-efficacy. Higher nonverbal synchrony characterized psychotherapies with higher symptom reduction.

Citation impact

740
total citations
FWCI
23.67
Percentile
100%
References
82
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Nonverbal communication
  • Psychology
  • Session (web analytics)
  • Clinical psychology
  • Psychotherapist
  • Outcome (game theory)
  • Developmental psychology
No related works found for this paper.