Trainee psychotherapists' emotion recognition accuracy during 1.5 years of psychotherapy education compared to a control group: no improvement after psychotherapy training

PeerJ. 2023 Dec 11:11:e16235. doi: 10.7717/peerj.16235. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

The ability to recognize and work with patients' emotions is considered an important part of most psychotherapy approaches. Surprisingly, there is little systematic research on psychotherapists' ability to recognize other people's emotional expressions. In this study, we compared trainee psychotherapists' nonverbal emotion recognition accuracy to a control group of undergraduate students at two time points: at the beginning and at the end of one and a half years of theoretical and practical psychotherapy training. Emotion recognition accuracy (ERA) was assessed using two standardized computer tasks, one for recognition of dynamic multimodal (facial, bodily, vocal) expressions and one for recognition of facial micro expressions. Initially, 154 participants enrolled in the study, 72 also took part in the follow-up. The trainee psychotherapists were moderately better at recognizing multimodal expressions, and slightly better at recognizing facial micro expressions, than the control group at the first test occasion. However, mixed multilevel modeling indicated that the ERA change trajectories for the two groups differed significantly. While the control group improved in their ability to recognize multimodal emotional expressions from pretest to follow-up, the trainee psychotherapists did not. Both groups improved their micro expression recognition accuracy, but the slope for the control group was significantly steeper than the trainee psychotherapists'. These results suggest that psychotherapy education and clinical training do not always contribute to improved emotion recognition accuracy beyond what could be expected due to time or other factors. Possible reasons for that finding as well as implications for the psychotherapy education are discussed.

Keywords: Emotion recognition accuracy; Micro expression recognition accuracy; Multimodal emotion recognition accuracy; Nonverbal behavior; Psychotherapists’ emotion recognition accuracy; Psychotherapy education.

MeSH terms

  • Emotions
  • Facial Expression
  • Humans
  • Psychotherapists*
  • Psychotherapy* / education
  • Students

Grants and funding

The research was supported by a research grant by the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation (Marcus och Amalia Wallenbergs Minnesfond; grant no. MAW 2013.0130) and a research grant co-funded by Forte and the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions from the EU commission (Cofas FIIP-project, dnr 2013-02727). Stockholm University provided the open access fees. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.