| Literature DB >> 35118604 |
Cayla Mitzkovitz1, Sheila M Dowd2, Thomas Cothran3, Suzanne Musil4,5.
Abstract
Nonverbal communication is integral to the success of psychotherapy and facial expression is an important component of nonverbal communication. The SARS CoV-2 pandemic has caused alterations in how psychotherapy services are provided. In this paper, potential issues that may arise from conducting psychotherapy when both the patient and therapist are wearing masks are explored. These include higher likelihood of misidentifying facial expression, especially when expression is incongruent with body language, and when the lower face is more important for correct identification of emotion. These issues may be particularly problematic for patient populations for whom emotion recognition may be a problem at baseline, or for those more prone to biases in emotional recognition. Suggestions are made for therapists to consider when seeing patients in-person when masks are necessary.Entities:
Keywords: Facial emotion expression; Facial emotion recognition; Masks; Psychotherapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35118604 PMCID: PMC8812949 DOI: 10.1007/s10880-022-09856-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Psychol Med Settings ISSN: 1068-9583
Suggestions and considerations for conducting psychotherapy with masks
| • Start an open dialogue with patients about the impact of masks on emotion expression and recognition to minimize nonverbal miscommunication |
| • Normalize the verbalization of emotions |
| • Encourage patients to ask questions about the therapist’s own emotional reactions |
| • Increase communication through body language |
| • Match nonverbal gestures and body language to the intended emotional expression |
| • Pay close attention to the patient's prosody |
| • Ask clarifying questions when unsure of the patient’s emotional state |
| • Use lower pitch, speak more loudly and more slowly, and eliminate background noise |
| • Be aware of individual differences |
| • Can lead to confusion between emotions with similar upper face expression |
| • Can cause non-emotional upper face expressions to be confused with emotional expression |
| • Consider how increased eye contact may be perceived by the patient, depending on their culture or diagnosis |
| • Appreciate that some patients may have difficulty increasing their eye contact |
| • Can convey emotion where none is intended |
| • Can lead to misperception of emotion |