Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Previous empirical psychotherapy studies have been analyzing patient-therapist physiological synchrony as an important marker of an adaptive interpersonal co-regulation process between patient and therapist, and therefore a process essential for developing the therapeutic alliance. Yet, research on synchrony of the electrodermal activity and its relationship with the therapeutic alliance is still scarce, with inconsistent findings. The present study aimed to analyze the association between electrodermal synchrony, a signature of coordinated sympathetic activation, and the quality of the therapeutic alliance throughout the therapeutic process. Twenty-one therapeutic dyads were recruited, consisting of 21 different patients with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder or social anxiety disorder, treated by six therapists. For each dyad, electrodermal activity was recorded during all 16 sessions of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy. The Working Alliance Inventory and the Session Evaluation Questionnaire were administered at each session to monitor the quality of the alliance and the respective session. Symptomatic improvements were measured with outcome questionnaires. We found clear evidence for the presence of in-phase electrodermal synchrony of therapists and patients. Additional results were that patient-leading synchrony was significantly more pronounced than therapist-leading synchrony, and that this leading role of patients in their sympathetic interactions during sessions was positively linked with the quality of the therapeutic bond as rated by the therapist, and negatively linked with patients' distress.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12116429PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1545719DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

electrodermal synchrony
12
therapeutic alliance
12
patient therapist
8
electrodermal activity
8
quality therapeutic
8
alliance
6
synchrony
6
therapeutic
6
electrodermal
5
synchrony patient
4

Similar Publications

This study evaluated autonomic synchrony and variability in synchrony as control variables in cusp catastrophe models of workload and fatigue for teams making dynamics decisions. In this experiment, 136 undergraduates were organized into 32 groups of three, four, and five members playing an online computer game while wearing electrodermal sensors. They also completed cognitive measures of elasticity-rigidity and situation awareness during the games.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Monitoring audience engagement using electrodermal activity during an inaugural lecture.

PLoS One

June 2025

Human Performance, Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), Soesterberg, The Netherlands.

Is an audience captured by a speech or lecture? At what times especially? Do different groups in an audience experience the same speech in different ways? Insight into attentional engagement of individuals can be valuable but difficult to quantify using self-report. Physiological synchrony, the degree to which physiological measurements such as electrodermal activity (EDA) of multiple people uniformly change, has been shown to covary with attentional engagement in lab settings. In this study, we moved out of the lab and monitored EDA of 30 individuals attending a real-life inaugural lecture.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Previous empirical psychotherapy studies have been analyzing patient-therapist physiological synchrony as an important marker of an adaptive interpersonal co-regulation process between patient and therapist, and therefore a process essential for developing the therapeutic alliance. Yet, research on synchrony of the electrodermal activity and its relationship with the therapeutic alliance is still scarce, with inconsistent findings. The present study aimed to analyze the association between electrodermal synchrony, a signature of coordinated sympathetic activation, and the quality of the therapeutic alliance throughout the therapeutic process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Interpersonal physiological synchrony (PS) is a process that emerges when the physiological responses of two or more individuals show signs of co-regulation and synchronization. PS shows promising relationships with social behavior, emerging as a potential therapeutic target for populations facing social limitations. Here we propose a case study where we investigate PS in a family with an individual in the autism spectrum (AS) while they undergo a narrative family therapy session.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Canine-assisted interactions (CAIs) have been explored to offer therapeutic benefits to human participants in various contexts, from addressing cancer-related fatigue to treating post-traumatic stress disorder. Despite their widespread adoption, there are still unresolved questions regarding the outcomes for both humans and animals involved in these interactions. Previous attempts to address these questions have suffered from core methodological weaknesses, especially due to absence of tools for an efficient objective evaluation and lack of focus on the canine perspective.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF