Coach Patrick Smith

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Publication Announcement: Frontiers in Psychology: Cognition

For those of you readers in academic or clinician roles, this may be of interest. Or any practitioners of mindfulness for that matter.

Working with an international team of clinicians and researchers, we have published a study conducted on how our non-vocal body posturing reflects the same functions of language and can provide insight into a client’s deeper understanding of what it means to be open to experiences. Below is the title, abstract, keywords, and citation. If you would like access to the full article, contact me and I will send you the link to get past the journal paywall.

What the body reveals about lay knowledge of psychological flexibility

Abstract

The embodied knowledge of psychological flexibility processes was tested by examining the ability of raters to score whole body pictures based on the degree to which they were open, aware, and engaged. Participants' best and worst physical posture was photographed when asked to think of a difficult psychological matter. Naïve and untrained raters (n = 16) showed excellent reliability while rating the postures of 82 persons from the general population in Reno and Chicago in the USA and recent Iranian immigrants in the Maryland/DC area. Participants showed embodied knowledge of psychological flexibility concepts across all three locations (though significantly less among those recently from Iran). Thus, experience alone appears to teach people that psychological flexibility is helpful, even if they are unable to express this knowledge in words. Implications for psychotherapeutic work is considered.

Citation

Falletta-Cowden, N., Smith, P., Hayes, S. C., Georgescu, S. & Kolahdouzan, S. A. (2022). What the body reveals about lay knowledge of psychological flexibility. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 11, 2848. Doi: 10.3390/jcm11102848