Abstract

Tschacher and Haken have recently applied a systems-based approach to modeling psychotherapy process in terms of potentially beneficial tendencies toward deterministic as well as chaotic forms of change in the client’s behavioral, cognitive and affective experience during the course of therapy. A chaotic change process refers to a greater exploration of the states that a client can be in, and it may have a potential positive role to play in their development. A distinction is made between on the one hand, specific instances of instability which are due to techniques employed by the therapist, and on the other, a more general instability which is due to the therapeutic relationship, and a key, necessary result of a successful therapeutic alliance. Drawing on Friston’s systems-based model of free energy minimization and predictive coding, it is proposed here that the increase in the instability of a client’s functioning due to therapy can be conceptualized as a reduction in the precisions (certainty) with which the client’s prior beliefs about themselves and their world, are held. It is shown how a good therapeutic alliance (characterized by successful interpersonal synchrony of the sort described by Friston and Frith) results in the emergence of a new hierarchical level in the client’s generative model of themselves and their relationship with the world. The emergence of this new level of functioning permits the reduction of the precisions of the client’s priors, which allows the client to ‘open up’: to experience thoughts, emotions and experiences they did not have before. It is proposed that this process is a necessary precursor to change due to psychotherapy. A good consilience can be found between this approach to understanding the role of the therapeutic alliance, and the role of epistemic trust in psychotherapy as described by Fonagy and Allison. It is suggested that beneficial forms of instability in clients are an underappreciated influence on psychotherapy process, and thoughts about the implications, as well as situations in which instability may not be beneficial (or potentially harmful) for therapy, are considered.

Highlights

  • Recent work by Tschacher and Haken (2019) reported in their book ‘The Process of Psychotherapy: Causation and Chance,’ offers an interesting perspective on a core healing mechanism of psychotherapy

  • A chaotic change process refers to a greater exploration of the states the client can be in – in other words, during the course of therapy, the client may experience a wider range of thoughts, behaviors and intensities of feeling

  • Friston and Frith (2015a) have developed a model that provides a consistent explanation of how interpersonal synchrony could result in such reduced downward precisions that are the focus of this paper

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Summary

Patrick Connolly*

Counselling and Psychology Department, Hong Kong Shue Yan University, North Point, Hong Kong SAR, China. Drawing on Friston’s systems-based model of free energy minimization and predictive coding, it is proposed here that the increase in the instability of a client’s functioning due to therapy can be conceptualized as a reduction in the precisions (certainty) with which the client’s prior beliefs about themselves and their world, are held It is shown how a good therapeutic alliance (characterized by successful interpersonal synchrony of the sort described by Friston and Frith) results in the emergence of a new hierarchical level in the client’s generative model of themselves and their relationship with the world.

INTRODUCTION
WHAT IS ORDER AND DISORDER IN COMPLEX SYSTEMS?
HOW REDUCED PRECISION OF PRIOR BELIEF RESULTS IN PERSONAL CHANGE
Chaotic Process as a Necessary Condition of Therapeutic Change
Specific Instabilities in Psychotherapy
When Instability Is Desirable or Undesirable in Therapy
Implications for Therapeutic Practice and Research
Full Text
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