Published December 25, 2021 | Version v1
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NIRS data during sandplay and interview

  • 1. Toyo Eiwa University*
  • 2. Shiga University
  • 3. Kyorin University
  • 4. Kyoto University

Description

Interactions between the client (Cl) and therapist (Th) evolve therapeutic relationships in psychotherapy. An interpersonal link or therapeutic space is implicitly developed wherein certain important elements are expressed and shared.  However, neural basis of psychotherapy, especially of non-verbal modalities, have scarcely been explored. Therefore, we examined the neural backgrounds of such therapeutic alliances during sandplay, a powerful art/play therapy technique. Real-time and simultaneous measurement of hemodynamics was conducted in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of Cl-Th pairs participating in sandplay and subsequent interview sessions through multichannel near-infrared spectroscopy. As sandplay is highly individualized, and no two sessions and products (sandtrays) are the same, we expected variation in interactive patterns in the Cl–Th pairs. Nevertheless, we observed a statistically significant correlation between the spatio-temporal patterns in signals produced by the homologous regions of the brains. During the sandplay condition, significant correlations were obtained in the lateral PFC and frontopolar (FP) regions in the real Cl-Th pairs. Furthermore, a significant correlation was observed in the FP region for the interview condition. The correlations found in our study were explained as a "remote" synchronization (i.e., unconnected peripheral oscillators synchronizing through a hub maintaining free desynchronized dynamics) between two subjects in a pair, possibly representing the neural foundation of empathy which arises commonly in sandplay therapy.

Notes

Please use these datasets only for quantitative analyses. We are refraining from uploading the sandtrays (i.e. sandplay pictures ) made by the Cls, as no consents for analyzing their sandtrays in any other ways, such as interpreting the individual sandplayers' personalities or psychological problems which might be presented in their sandtrays.

In the first column,

task-start indicates the starting point of sandtray

task-end indicates the end poing of sandtray

interview-start indicates the starting point of interview

interview-end indicates the end point of interview

The graphs of NIRS signals and heatmaps were obtained using the R script "analysis6_Study1_task_20180914.R " and "analysis7_Study1_interview_20180914.R", and the cross-correlograms were obtained by "correlogramviewer1.R".

Funding provided by: Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001691
Award Number: 25380953

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Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.11377/sandplay.30.3_73 (DOI)
Is source of
10.5061/dryad.2z34tmpmt (DOI)