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Realizing Relational Preferences Through Transforming Interpersonal Patterns.

Joaquín Gaete1, Inés Sametband1, Sally St George2

  • 1School of Psychology, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Santiago, Chile.

Family Process
|December 16, 2018
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Family therapy uses conversational practices to help families develop new relational patterns. This study identified five "realizers" within Transforming Interpersonal Patterns (TIPs) to facilitate positive change.

Keywords:
Disruptive BehaviorFamily TherapyInterpersonal PatternsTherapeutic Processanálisis del discursoconducta disruptivaproceso terapéuticoterapia familiar家庭质量治疗过程破坏性行为话语分析

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Family Studies
  • Communication Studies

Background:

  • Family therapy often focuses on meaning-making through conversation.
  • Disruptive behaviors in children/adolescents present challenges for family functioning.
  • Understanding therapeutic conversations is key to effective interventions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To identify and categorize conversational practices in successful family therapy for disruptive behaviors.
  • To introduce the concept of Transforming Interpersonal Patterns (TIPs) as a framework for analyzing these practices.
  • To develop a model of 'realizers' that facilitate the articulation of relational preferences.

Main Methods:

  • A 3-year qualitative study analyzing conversational data from Chilean family therapy sessions.
  • Utilized the IPscope framework to examine meaning-making processes.
  • Identified and categorized five types of TIPs: Preparatory, Identifier, Tracker, Transformer, and Consolidator.

Main Results:

  • An emergent model of five categories of conversational practices, termed 'realizers', was developed.
  • These realizers empirically demonstrate how families 'talk-into-being' preferred ways of relating.
  • User-friendly descriptors for subcategories of realizers were provided to aid practitioners.

Conclusions:

  • Transforming Interpersonal Patterns (TIPs) offer a novel, empirically traceable approach to family therapy.
  • The identified 'realizers' provide practical tools for therapists to foster positive relational change.
  • Further research can explore the theoretical implications and clinical application of TIPs.