Abstract

Psychotherapy can be an emotionally laden conversation, where both verbal and non-verbal interventions may impact the therapeutic process. Prior research has postulated mixed results in how clients emotionally react following a silence after the therapist is finished talking, potentially due to studying a limited range of silences with primarily qualitative and self-report methodologies. A quantitative exploration may illuminate new findings. Utilizing research and automatic data processing from the field of linguistics, we analysed the full range of silence lengths (0.2 to 24.01 seconds), and measures of emotional expression - vocally encoded arousal and emotional valence from the works spoken - of 84 audio recordings Motivational Interviewing sessions. We hypothesized that both the level and the variance of client emotional expression would change as a function of silence length, however, due to the mixed results in the literature the direction of emotional change was unclear. We conducted a multilevel linear regression to examine how the level of client emotional expression changed across silence length, and an ANOVA to examine the variability of client emotional expression across silence lengths. Results indicated in both analyses that as silence length increased, emotional expression largely remained the same. Broadly, we demonstrated a weak connection between silence length and emotional expression, indicating no persuasive evidence that silence leads to client emotional processing and expression.

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