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      Dynamic models of individual change in psychotherapy process research.

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          Abstract

          There is a need for rigorous methods to study the mechanisms that lead to individual-level change (i.e., process-outcome research). We argue that panel data (i.e., longitudinal study of a number of individuals) methods have 3 major advantages for psychotherapy researchers: (1) enabling microanalytic study of psychotherapeutic processes in a clinically intuitive way, (2) modeling lagged associations over time to ensure direction of causality, and (3) isolating within-patient changes over time from between-patient differences, thereby protecting against confounding influences because of the effects of unobserved stable attributes of individuals. However, dynamic panel data methods present a complex set of analytical challenges. We focus on 2 particular issues: (1) how long-term trajectories in the variables of interest over the study period should be handled, and (2) how the use of a lagged dependent variable as a predictor in regression-based dynamic panel models induces endogeneity (i.e., violation of independence between predictor and model error term) that must be taken into account in order to appropriately isolate within- and between-person effects.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Consult Clin Psychol
          Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          1939-2117
          0022-006X
          Jun 2017
          : 85
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Centre for Psychotherapy Research and Education, Karolinska Institutet.
          [2 ] Department of Political Science, University of Pittsburgh.
          [3 ] Department of Psychology, Lund University.
          [4 ] Department of Psychology, University of Trier.
          [5 ] Department of Behavioral Sciences and Learning, Linköping University.
          Article
          2017-15658-001
          10.1037/ccp0000203
          28394170
          febd4ac1-ea07-4161-bd37-d00b782eb951
          History

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