Abstract
Conducting psychotherapy with videoconference technologies has become a
solution to deliver mental health services when it is difficult or impossible to meet in face
to face. During videoconferencing psychotherapy (VCP), the interactions between the
client and the therapists are influenced by telepresence and acceptance of the
technological setting. In previous work, our group described acceptance of the
technological setting in VCP as a multidimensional process that involves verbal, nonverbal, para-verbal and proxemic cues from both interactants. The goal of the present
study is to illustrate the intersubjective dynamic processes occurring in psychodynamicoriented VCP via traditional communication channels. The long-term goal is to describe
how intersubjective processes enhance the level of acceptance of the technological setting
in VCP. We used a formal interactional approach to analyze intersubjectivity and
acceptance during an excerpt from a video recording of a VCP session. We analyzed the
following layers of interactions to evaluate intersubjectivity and acceptance: interactional
modalities, cooperation modalities, intersubjective modalities. Our results show a
dynamic process of accordance between different layers of interactions, related to
intersubjectivity process. Despite the perceptual deprivation, caused by the screen in a
videoconference telepsychotherapy framework, the screen can allow a dynamic and
multimodal communication. Much like a magnifying glass, our micro-analysis revealed
a dialogic communication occurring on the video screen where several natural
communicative registers converged into a dynamic unified system, increasing the
expressiveness of the psychotherapeutic dialogue.
Lingua originale | English |
---|---|
pagine (da-a) | 217-221 |
Numero di pagine | 5 |
Rivista | Annual Review of CyberTherapy and Telemedicine |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2020 |
Keywords
- conversation
- intersubjectivity
- telepsychotherapy