Is “Self-Experience” Really a Transdiagnostic Concept? Preliminary Evidence in Favor of the Transdiagnostic Conception of Functional Analytic Psychotherapy
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Frontiers Research Foundation
Materia
Self Psychopathology Transdiagnostic Functional analytic psychotherapy Development
Date
2021-08-24Referencia bibliográfica
González Palma AM, Sánchez-Sánchez LC and Garcia-Montes JM (2021) Is “Self-Experience” Really a Transdiagnostic Concept? Preliminary Evidence in Favor of the Transdiagnostic Conception of Functional Analytic Psychotherapy. Front. Psychiatry 12:671223. doi: [10.3389/fpsyt.2021.671223]
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University of Almeria's Contextual Therapies training programAbstract
Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP) offers a radically behavioral and transdiagnostic
conception of the formation of the “self” and the appearance of a diversity of
psychological problems. This study examined the extent to which a wide variety of
psychological disorders (somatization, obsessive–compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity,
depression, anxiety, hostility/aggressiveness, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, and
psychoticism) and a global index of psychopathological severity may in fact be linked
to problems of the “self” according to the FAP conception. Two questionnaires, one
related to self-experience according to FAP and the other to find the scores on several
different psychopathology scales, were administered to 280 adult Spaniards for this
purpose. The results confirmed the transdiagnostic nature of the “self”-experience. There
are significant and strong correlations between all the psychopathology scales studied
and self-experience. Linear regression analyses also show that, along with age and
gender, in some cases, the score on self-experience predicts each and every one of
the psychopathological variables studied, in addition to the Global Severity Index. These
results are discussed and related to the transdiagnostic approach to psychopathology.