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Lo Coco, Gianluca; Gullo, Salvatore; Kivlighan, Dennis M., Jr. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2012
There is a lack of research examining patients' and other group members' agreement about their therapeutic alliance. In the present study, the person-group (P-G) fit model was adopted to predict that the group member symptom reduction will be greater when the group member's and the other group members' perceptions of their alliance to the…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Treatment, Patients, Psychotherapy, Symptoms (Individual Disorders)
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Kivlighan, Dennis M., Jr.; Kivlighan, D. Martin, III; Cole, Odessa Dorian – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 2012
The group's absence norm, a construct from the applied psychology literature, was used to examine session absences in personal growth groups. Rather than examining the absence norm statically, we modeled it dynamically as a time-varying covariate (Tasca et al., 2010). We also examined moderation by modeling the interaction of the absence norm and…
Descriptors: Interaction, Statistical Data, Probability, Group Therapy
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Kivlighan, Dennis M., Jr.; Quigley, Susan T. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1991
Fifteen experienced and 15 novice group therapists watched videotaped group counseling session and made similarity judgments for pairs of group members. Findings suggest that three cognitive dimensions (dominant/submissive, friendly/unfriendly, supporting therapeutic work/hindering therapeutic work) were used by experienced therapists; only two…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Differences, Experience, Group Therapy
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Wheeler, Jan L.; Kivlighan, Dennis M., Jr. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1995
Performed two studies to examine things unsaid in group counseling. Examined categories of things unsaid, relationships between types of things unsaid, stage of group development, and gender. Found more advice and outside things unsaid during orientation-inclusion stage and more positive feeling and empathic things unsaid during affection-cohesion…
Descriptors: College Students, Group Behavior, Group Counseling, Group Discussion