Broekhuijse, A., Muñoz-Martinez, A., Garcia, Y., & Skinta, M. D. (2025). Relating-as-Context: Utilizing Functional Analytic Psychotherapy to Enhance Perspective-Taking and the Development of the Self. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science, 37, 100928. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcbs.2025.100928
Deficits in self-related processes, including emotion recognition, perspective-taking, and individuation, are increasingly recognized as transdiagnostic mechanisms underlying a range of psychological disorders. From a behavioral perspective, the self is not a fixed entity but a dynamic repertoire of referential verbal behaviors that emerge and evolve through social-verbal interactions—a process conceptualized as selfing. Despite its clinical significance, interventions specifically targeting selfing deficits remain underdeveloped. Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP) provides a compelling framework for addressing these difficulties by leveraging real-time interpersonal interactions to observe, shape, and reinforce adaptive relational behaviors. This paper conceptualizes the logical FAP interaction as a structured intervention that includes relational cues that transform different relational cues (e.g., deictic, coordination), leading to a shift in derived relational responding to promote selfing behaviors, emotional awareness, and perspective-taking. By integrating Relational Frame Theory (RFT) principles into the analysis of the FAP logical interaction, this approach advances the theoretical and clinical application of FAP for self-development and interpersonal functioning. A clinical case vignette illustrates how this method fosters a flexible and adaptive self-concept, reinforcing its potential for enhancing relational flexibility and well-being.
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