Process transforms inputs to determine outcomes: Therapists are responsible for managing process.

MS Krause, W Lutz - Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 2009 - psycnet.apa.org
The variance in outcomes for psychotherapy patients is not partitionable into components
that are independent contributions of treatments, therapists, and patients. If these inputs did …

Psychotherapy process-outcome correlations may be misleading.

WB Stiles - Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training, 1988 - psycnet.apa.org
A standard criterion for judging the value of a psychotherapy process component (eg,
reflection of feeling) is the degree to which it correlates with outcome measures. This model …

Major developments in methods addressing for whom psychotherapy may work and why

S Zilcha-Mano - Psychotherapy Research, 2019 - Taylor & Francis
Significant progress has been achieved in the last decades in studying two central questions
in psychotherapy research: what treatment works for which patient and why does treatment …

Issues and findings in investigating predictors of psychotherapy outcome: Introduction to the special section

JP Barber - Psychotherapy Research, 2007 - Taylor & Francis
Over the last two decades, much ink has been spilled in the debate over the relative efficacy
of different therapies. Many researchers have tried, with some success, to demonstrate that …

Some observations on studying therapists instead of treatment packages.

MJ Lambert, SA Baldwin - 2009 - psycnet.apa.org
Comments on the original article," Process tranforms inputs to determine outcomes:
Therapists are responsible for managing process," by M. Krause and W. Lutz (see record …

Understanding processes of change: How some patients reveal more than others—and some groups of therapists less—about what matters in psychotherapy

RJ DeRubeis, LA Gelfand, RE German… - Psychotherapy …, 2014 - Taylor & Francis
Objective: We identify difficulties researchers encounter in psychotherapy process-outcome
investigations, and we describe several limitations of the popular “variance accounted for” …

Treatment process research methods.

WB Stiles, L Honos-Webb, LM Knobloch - 1999 - psycnet.apa.org
This chapter is organized around the following series of questions: What happens in
psychotherapy? How do therapies differ? How do clients act and think differently? What are …

What is and can be attributed to the therapeutic relationship?

LE Beutler, TM Harwood - Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 2002 - Springer
This paper reviews findings from two studies that support the contentions of the Generic
Model of Psychotherapy that therapeutic outcome must be viewed as arising from a complex …

Measurement of the impact of psychotherapy sessions.

WB Stiles - Journal of consulting and clinical psychology, 1980 - psycnet.apa.org
Abstract The Session Evaluation Questionnaire (SEQ), which consists of 22 bipolar adjective
scales in semantic differential format, was completed by both therapists (10 clinical …

Segments versus whole sessions: Which is the better unit for psychotherapy process research?

J Mintz, L Luborsky - Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1971 - psycnet.apa.org
Recorded 15 psychotherapists in 2 early sessions with 2 of their patients. 3 4-min segments
were rated on a variety of process variables and compared with ratings of the entire session …