Browsing Research publications by Author "Watson, Sue"
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
-
Border crossing
Winter, David; Watson, Sue; Gillman-Smith, Ian; Gilbert, Nicholas; Acton, Timothy (FrancoAngeli, 2003) -
The Personal Construct Inventory : an alternative construction of personal construct methodology, or just another esoteric questionnaire?
Watson, Sue; Winter, David; Rossotti, Nicole (EPCA, 1996) -
Personal construct psychotherapy and the cognitive therapies : different in theory but can they be differentiated in practice?
Winter, David; Watson, Sue (1999)This article delineates differences between personal construct psychotherapy and rationalist cognitive therapy at a theoretical level and in the nature of the therapeutic relationship and presents an empirical investigation ... -
A process and outcome study of personal construct psychotherapy
Watson, Sue; Winter, David (Whurr, 2005) -
Psicoterapia de constructos personales y terapias cognitivas: Diferentes en teoria, pero ?pueden ser diferenciadas en la practica?
Winter, David; Watson, Sue (1997) -
Psicoterapia dei costrutti personali e terapie cognitive : differenti in teoria, possono essere differenziate in pratica?
Winter, David; Watson, Sue (1996) -
Un studio naturalista sobre el cambio de los conflictos cognitivos durante la psicoterapia
Feixas i Viaplana, Guillem; Saul Gutierrez, Luis-Angel; Winter, David; Watson, Sue (2008)The authors present a proposal to operationalize and assess the change of a type of eognitive confiict called implicative dilemma (iD) in the context of personal construct theory. In a sample of 87 patients, Dls and symptoms ... -
Towards an evidence base for personal construct psychotherapy
Watson, Sue; Winter, David (EPCA, 2001) -
Use of the repertory grid as a nomothetic measure in psychotherapy research : an example of optimal functioning, or of failure to complete the experience cycle?
Watson, Sue; Winter, David (EPCA, 1999) -
What works for whom but shouldn’t and what doesn’t work for whom but should?
Watson, Sue; Winter, David (2000)Reviews of research evidence suggest that specific types of therapy are likely to be useful in treating particular types of disorder. Thus, the present commitment to evidence-based practice may mean that clients are ...