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Reciprocity in Self-Disclosure within the Psychological Interview

Psychological Reports, 1977
24 male and 24 female college subjects were interviewed individually by a male graduate student, using standardized interviews. Intimacy of subjects' self-disclosures during the interviews was investigated in relation to interviewing style (reflecting versus disclosing), seating arrangement (presence or absence of intervening desk), sex of subjects ...
W. Morton Feigenbaum
openaire   +3 more sources

Therapeutic aspects of the psychological interview

Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1946
M. M. Font
openaire   +3 more sources

Phenomenological psychological interviewing.

The Humanistic Psychologist, 2020
The purpose of this article is to contextualize qualitative phenomenological psychological interviewing within the research tradition of psychology as a human science and how it relates to a phenom ...
openaire   +1 more source

Self-Injurious Thoughts and Behaviors Interview-Revised: Development, reliability, and validity.

Psychological Assessment, 2020
The Self-Injurious Thoughts and Behaviors Interview (SITBI) is a widely used measure of the presence, frequency, and characteristics of suicide and self-harming thoughts and behaviors.
K. Fox   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The psychological damages of linguistic racism and international students in Australia

, 2020
Drawing on ethnographic interview data informed by international students in Australia, this study aims to expand the notion of ‘linguistic racism’ through two main traits – ‘ethnic accent bullying’ and ‘linguistic stereotyping.’ ‘Ethnic accent bullying’
Sender Dovchin
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Assessment interviewing in clinical psychology

British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1979
The relative specificity of the structure of psychological traits has presented the clinical psychologist with a very difficult problem; it means that generalized test procedures are of limited use. This paper suggests: (1) that the interview presents one way of beginning to solve this problem, and (2) that the findings of psychological research may ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Deception Traits in Psychological Interviewing

Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, 2013
Deception researchers have attempted to improve people’s ability to detect deceit by teaching them which cues to pay attention to. Such training only yields limited success because, we argue, the nonverbal and verbal cues that liars spontaneously display are faint and unreliable. In recent years, the emphasis has radically changed and the current focus
Vrij, Aldert   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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