A relational frame theory account of empathy
Vilardaga, R. (2009). A relational frame theory account of empathy. The International Journal of Behavioral Consultation and Therapy, 5, 178-184.
Empirical Support
This list includes research articles that contain original data relevant to RFT up until 2010. As the number of RFT articles has increased greatly since then, updating this list has become challenging.
Empirical Support
This list includes research articles that contain original data relevant to RFT up until 2010. As the number of RFT articles has increased greatly since then, updating this list has become challenging.
AUDIO: Intuitive exploration of RFT before its formulation: why has humanity made thought so important in every aspect of life?
Assessing perspective taking in schizophrenia using Relational Frame Theory
Villatte, M., Monestès, J. L., McHugh, L., Freixa i Baqué, E., & Loas, G. (2010). Assessing perspective taking in schizophrenia using Relational Frame Theory. The Psychological Record, 60, 413-424.
Relational Frame Theory (RFT) explains perspective-taking performance in terms of deictic relational responding, which has been empirically examined in a number of studies employing both adults and children. Following this view, the current study aims at assessing deictic relational responding in people with schizophrenia, a population for whom there is evidence of a deficit in mental states attribution. A perspective-taking task and a mental states attribution task were employed with a sample of 15 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and 15 age-matched controls. Results revealed poorer performance of participants with schizophrenia in responding in accordance with deictic frames at the highest levels of relational complexity (i.e., reversed and double reversed perspective-taking), while no difference appeared between the two groups on simple perspective-taking. In addition, a significant deficit emerged on the mental states attribution task. Group effects remained significant after controlling for IQ. Furthermore, performance in complex deictic responding was a strong predictor of accuracy on the mental states attribution task in both groups, thus supporting the RFT approach to Theory of Mind. These findings suggest the relevance of conceptualizing mental states attribution in terms of relational responding for the understanding and remediation of deficits linked to schizophrenia.
Assessing perspective taking in schizophrenia using Relational Frame Theory
Villatte, M., Monestès, J. L., McHugh, L., Freixa i Baqué, E., & Loas, G. (2010). Assessing perspective taking in schizophrenia using Relational Frame Theory. The Psychological Record, 60, 413-424.
Relational Frame Theory (RFT) explains perspective-taking performance in terms of deictic relational responding, which has been empirically examined in a number of studies employing both adults and children. Following this view, the current study aims at assessing deictic relational responding in people with schizophrenia, a population for whom there is evidence of a deficit in mental states attribution. A perspective-taking task and a mental states attribution task were employed with a sample of 15 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and 15 age-matched controls. Results revealed poorer performance of participants with schizophrenia in responding in accordance with deictic frames at the highest levels of relational complexity (i.e., reversed and double reversed perspective-taking), while no difference appeared between the two groups on simple perspective-taking. In addition, a significant deficit emerged on the mental states attribution task. Group effects remained significant after controlling for IQ. Furthermore, performance in complex deictic responding was a strong predictor of accuracy on the mental states attribution task in both groups, thus supporting the RFT approach to Theory of Mind. These findings suggest the relevance of conceptualizing mental states attribution in terms of relational responding for the understanding and remediation of deficits linked to schizophrenia.
Establishing derived manding for specific amounts with three children: Attempt at synthesizing Skinner's verbal behavior RFT
Murphy, C., & Barnes-Holmes, D. (2009). Establishing derived manding for specific amounts with three children: An attempt at synthesizing Skinner's verbal behavior and relational frame theory. Psychological Record, 59(1), 75-91.
Participants were 2 typically developing children, aged 9 and 10 years, and 1 child, aged 4 years, with a reported severe speech delay. Five specific mand functions were trained such that participants learned to mand for the delivery or removal of tokens to the value of –2, –1, 0, +1, and +2, by presenting an arbitrary stimulus (A1, A2, A3, A4, and A5, respectively). The A stimuli were then incorporated into a series of interrelated conditional discriminations (A1-B1, B1-C1, A2-B2, B2-C2, A3-B3, B3-C3, A4-B4, B4-C4, A5-B5, B5-C5). Subsequent tests determined if participants derived 5 specific mands, presenting C1, C2, C3, C4, and C5 as mands for –2, –1, 0, +1 and +2 tokens. Three participants demonstrated derived manding, and derived manding altered in accordance with newly trained relations across two reversal procedures.