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Dr. Joseph Ciarrochi, School of Psychology, University of Wollongong

The ImPActS model of principled living: Measuring the extent that people view principles to be I mportant, P ressured by others, Act ivated, and S uccessfully engaged. Dr. Joseph Ciarrochi, School of Psychology, University of Wollongong

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Dr. Joseph Ciarrochi, School of Psychology, University of Wollongong

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  1. The ImPActS model of principled living: Measuring the extent that people view principles to be Important, Pressured by others, Activated, and Successfully engaged. Dr. Joseph Ciarrochi, School of Psychology, University of Wollongong Contributors to the research reviewed in this presentation Jess Frearson Kate Williams Stephenie Veage Natalie Stefanic Peter Leeson Patrick Heaven

  2. Core hypothesis 1 Human happiness and vitality will be determined by four components of valued living Importance—What people find to be important and unimportantPressure from others –to what extent do people feel their principles are driven by what others want?Activation—How many principles do people put into play in life?Successfully engagement—Are people successfully living their principles?

  3. The ImPActS intervention model

  4. Measuring and using principles in therapy ACT intervention Survey of Life Principles • Card sorting task • Life in general • Work • SLP guides clinical focus SLP as an outcome measure, focusing on valued activity instead of symptoms

  5. Past research in principles • Values work (Schwartz, et al., Rokeach et al.). • What is most important to you? • Are there Universal values? • Personal strivings (Sheldon, Emmons, Deci). • What do you strive for • Why do you strive? Is it for authentic or controlled reasons? • We will call both of these “guiding principles” for ease of reference

  6. Recasting Self-Determination Theory in behavioural terms. Pliance Tracking Deci and Ryban, 2000, psychological science

  7. Research on values

  8. The structure of values (Schwarz)

  9. Methods

  10. SLP content • The SLP seeks to capture all the dimensions in the Schwarz circumplex. • It also sought to expand the range of items to include principles related to career, health, experiential control, sexuality, and other important domains. • Items focus on what could personally be put into play • “Creating beauty” instead of “A world of beauty” • Items have a verb focus, in keeping with the ACT notion that values are patterns of behavior that are never permanently realized.

  11. SLP rating scales Go beyond importance scale used in values research Importance Pressure Activity Success

  12. N1 = 300 University sample N2= 240 adolescents in Grade 12

  13. Top 10 most important values

  14. Top 10 most pressured values

  15. Top 10 most successful values

  16. Top 10 failures Note: Failure index= Importance – success.

  17. Does the SLP cover important domains? As expected, SLP importance scale correlates in expected ways to well-accepted Schwarz value measure (Williams and Ciarrochi, 2009). We will be assessing whether it correlates with key dimensions on a job interest survey

  18. Does the SLP cover important domains? SLP and personality (Steph Veage thesis). If the SLP has comprehensive coverage, then it should be able to distinguish between types of personality Grade 12 high school students; n = 240

  19. Other findings Neurotics tend to feel more external pressure to put their principles into play, and are less successful at their principles Neurotics feel they are much worse at experiential control Agreeable and C look similar in achievement motivation. However, C are more successful at achievement (both lasting and conscientious)

  20. SLP relations to well-being 300 University Students • We focused on variables of interest to clinicians: e.g., measures of emotional well-being, psychological well-being, social support, and relationship satisfaction

  21. We observed four patterns between principles and well-being 1) Happy people find the principle to be important and tend to be successful at it (relationship principles, stimulation principles, hedonism, health, achievement) 2) Happy people were indifferent to the principle or found it unappealing, but nevertheless were somewhat more successful at it (power) 3) Happy people do not find the principle to be particularly important but nevertheless succeed at it. (sex) 4) Happy people do not find the principle to be particularly important, nor do they succeed at it. (being wealthy, tradition principles, security principles, conformity principles)

  22. Importance and success  well-being

  23. The Link between principle importance and three forms of well-being

  24. The Link between principle success and three forms of well-being

  25. Power principles People who valued power tended to be more hostile. If these people were in an intimate relationship, their partner tended to be less satisfied in the relationship

  26. Sex principles Valuing sex was unrelated to well-being But getting sex was related to emotional, psychological, and social well-being

  27. Emotional control principle Most likely to be underachieved Valuing emotional control linked slightly to higher well-being Succeeding at emotional control tended to have the strongest correlate of all aspects of well-being

  28. Correlation, causality, and a core ACT hypothesis When experiential control principles are inconsistent with important behavior-focused principles, you get the following:

  29. Can the SLP substitute for well-being measures? • Positive affect = 41% variance explained by SLP • Hostility = 18% • Sadness = 28% • Autonomy = 30% • Positive relations with others = 43% • Purpose = 37% • Amount of social support = 9% • Satisfaction with social support = 18% • Relationship satisfaction = 8%

  30. Using the SLP in ACT interventions

  31. Importance ratings • What do clients value most? What is likely to be the focus of therapy • Principle themes. Social. Power. Art? Achievment • Look out for low importance ratings involving relationships, stimulation, hedonism, health, and achievement Likely intervention: Values clarification (see card sorting task)

  32. Low principle Activity • Clients may endorse several principles as important, but state that they have not tried to put them into play. • What are the barriers to putting the principles into play? Likely interventions: acceptance, defusion, or overcoming practical barriers?

  33. Dominance of experiential control items • High importance on experiential control dimension • Nothing inherently wrong with experiential control, unless in conflicts with other important principles Likely interventions: Creative hopelessness, acceptance

  34. Presence of strong compliance pressure • Research suggests that pressured principles tend not to lead to vital living or well-being (Sheldon & Kasser, 1995) and tend to be associated with hostility and sadness (Ciarrochi, 2008). • Danger of contercompliance: In reaction to pressure, the client refuses to act according to the principle, or acts contrary to the principle

  35. Presence of strong pressure: Interventions • Therapist behaviours: acting with humility in session, undermining your own authority, encouraging clients to not believe anything you say • Remove source of pressure. E.g., imagine nobody knew you were living the principle. Would you still live it? • Seek to identify past experience that was vital. E.g., sweet spot exercise. Connect their valued statements to this vital past

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  38. References Paez-Blarrina, M. L., Carmen; Gutierrez-Martinez, Olga; Valdivia, Sonsoles; Ortega, Jose; Rodriguez-Valverde, Miguel. (2008). The role of values with personal examples in altering the functions of pain: Comparison between acceptance-based and cognitive-control-based. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 46, 84-97. Paez-Blarrina, M. L., Carmen; Gutierrez-Martinez, Olga; Valdivia, Sonsoles; Rodriguez-Valverde, Miguel; Ortega, Jose. (2008). Coping with pain in the motivational context of values: Comparison between an acceptance-based and a cognitive control--based protocol. Behavior Modification, 32, 403-422. Power, M., Sigmarsson, S., & Emelkamp, P. (2008). A Meta-Analytic Review of Psychological Treatments for Social Anxiety Disorder. International Journal of Cognitive Therapy, 1, 94-113. Rokeach, M. (1973). The nature of human values. New York: Free Press. Sagiv, L., & Schwartz, S. H. (2000). Value priorities and subjective well-being: direct relations and congruity effects. European Journal of Social Psychology, 30, 177-198. Schwartz, S. H., & Bilsky, W. (1987). Toward a Universal Psychological Structure of Human Values. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 53, 550-562. Schwartz, S. H., & Bilsky, W. (1990). Toward a theory of the universal content and structure of values:extensions and cross-cultural replications. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 58, 878-893. Schwartz, S. H., & Boehnke, K. (2004). Evaluating the structure of human values with confirmatory factor analysis. Journal of Research in Personality, 38, 230-255. Sheldon, K. M., & Elliot, A. J. (1999). Goal striving, need satisfaction, and longitudinal well-being: The self-concordance model. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 76(3), 482-497. Sheldon, K. M., Elliot, A. J., Ryan, R. M., Chirkov, V., Kim, Y., Wu, C., et al. (2004). Self-concordance and subjective well-being in four cultures. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 35(2), 209-223. Sheldon, K. M., & Kasser, T. (1998). Pursuing personal goals: Skills enable progress, but not all progress is beneficial. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 24(12), 1319-1331. Wilson, K., Sandoz, E., Kitchens, J., & Roberts, M. (2008). The Valued Living Questionnaire: Defining and Measuring Valued Action within a Behavioral Framework.Unpublished manuscript, University of Mississippi. Zettle, R. D. (2003). Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) vs. systematic desensitization in treatment of mathematics anxiety. Psychological Record, 53(2), 197-215.

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