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Psychodynamic Approach 
Sahithi Nymisha Kotala
Methodology 
 Looks at case studies in general, case studies used in 
his approach, correlation design, cross-sectional and 
longitudinal studies and sampling techniques.
Case Study research method 
 That allows data to be gathered in both depth and detail. Study 
of an individual or group E.g. small no. of kids brought up whilst 
deprived of any kind of parenting. 
 Involve programs like – government funding, health promotion 
 Individual/small group tend to be the focus of the study 
 Depth + Detail : interviews; questionnaires; observations; 
gathering as much data as possible. 
 Central research ‘tool’ – history of the case, background 
information (qualitative data) 
 Tests and experiments are possible whilst using this method
Case Study Vs. Research methods 
 Does not give data – it is just 
a process 
 Case study history is 
qualitative data 
 Actually methods to obtain 
data within or for a case 
study via interviews, 
questionnaires etc 
 Provides measurable data - 
quantitative as well as 
qualitative 
Case study 
Research 
method
Triangulation 
Generate themes (final 
results) 
+ 
ideas (hypothesis) 
Pool data 
-From a person or a different 
source 
- look for common ground 
Reinforce data from one another
Case studies – scientific? 
YES 
o Research collects information 
through study – systematically – 
evidence is gathered there for 
any claim by (backed up) 
o Participant’s (patient/ analysand) 
claim Interviews , 
questionnaires, observations are 
structured. 
o They are valid and reliable as the 
IF it is a repeated measures 
format (replicability) 
o It is measurable because the 
format focuses on what a person 
thinks not feels 
NO 
o The type of data is qualitative , it 
is rich in depth and detail – 
ecological validity HOWEVER 
without subjectivity the data can 
not be analysed; making it 
experimentally invalid! 
o Situational variables whilst 
interpreting the data – time, 
place, culture, mood etc 
questioning reliability and 
validity! 
G 
E 
N 
E 
R 
A 
L 
I 
S 
I 
B 
I 
L 
I 
T 
Y
Precautions… 
 Researchers deliberately search or “hunt” 
for evidence 
going against their prediction or work backwards from 
their results 
Reliability 
Generasibility 
Validility Application 
Ethics
Case Studies (general analysis) 
 Study of individual 
or small groups 
 In-depth rich data 
 Mainly qualitative 
data 
 Use many research 
methods such as 
questionnaires, case 
histories and 
observation 
 Generation of 
themes 
 Uses tables of 
categories 
 Cross – case analysis 
 Some quantitative 
data
Evaluation of case study 
research methods (general) 
STRENGTHS 
 Data are valid because they 
are in depth; detailed and 
focus on real experiences in a 
real situation 
 A valuable research 
methodology because a case 
study may be the only way to 
gather rich, detailed 
qualitative information in 
context and with meaning for 
those concerned. 
WEAKNESSES 
 Lacks generalisibility because 
they are about one individual 
(for small group) only, so they 
are specific rather than 
general and data cannot be 
applied fairly to others 
 Hard to replicate, so cannot 
be tested for reliability, which 
means data may be 
subjective and cannot be 
used to build up a body of 
knowledge.
Freud used case study methods to conduct his 
research and reinforce his theories. His 
research was also a therapy for his analysand 
(participants) 
AIM: to access the 
“unconscious” mind – not 
possible by standard means 
Freud’s 
Methods 
‘Dream’ and ‘Symbol’ analysis: 
interpreting dreams by hearing manifest 
content (the reported dream) and 
interpreting symbols to uncover the 
latent content (repressed wish) 
Slips of the Tongue 
(Freudian slips) : 
Mistakes when talking that reveal 
unconscious desires 
Free 
association: 
Allowing a stream 
of consciousness to 
try to access the 
unconscious
Freud’s methods Vs. Case study method 
Similarities 
Focuses on qualitative data 
Gathering of in-depth rich data from one person 
Differences 
Focuses on qualitative data 
Gathering of in-depth rich data from one person
Freud’s case studies 
(general analysis) 
 Study of an individual 
 In-depth, rich data 
 Qualitative data 
 Uses different 
techniques such as slips 
of the tongue, dream 
analysis and free 
association 
 Suggesting 
interpretation to 
analysand 
 To help to reveal 
unconscious repressed 
thoughts, emotions and 
memories 
 To make the 
unconscious  
conscious 
 To release the energy to 
aid symptoms 
 To give evidence for 
Freud’s ideas
Stengths Vs Weaknesses 
 Uses different 
methods to uncover 
unconscious wishes to 
access by 
conventional means 
 Acts both as a 
research method and 
a therapy and allows 
the analysand to be 
cured 
 Involves subjective 
interpretation by the 
analyst, so it is not 
scientific 
 Cannot be replicated 
to test for reliability 
because it focuses on 
the unique 
unconscious desires of 
an individual and the 
analysis is carried out 
by one therapist
BPS 
British Psychological society and other 
professional bodies outline ethical guidelines 
that must be followed in research: 
 Informed consent 
 Deceit 
 Debriefing 
 Competence 
 Right to withdraw 
Whatever the research method; case studies 
are no exceptions
Confidentiality and 
Privacy 
All data should be kept confidential and private, it cold be 
argued that the data might be valuable enough to warrant 
invasion of such – BPS doesn’t support this. Unless the 
analysand is willing to give consent of this information 
being revealed.
Practitioner’s Ethics 
 Competence 
 Obligation 
 Informed consent 
 Personal conduct 
 Access to health records 
 Confidentiality 
 Responsibility 
 Safeguarding fitness to practice 
 Teaching training + supervision 
 Publications 
 Private practice and relations with media
Credibility for Freud’s 
studies 
Masson (1989)’s criticism +psychoanalysis of Freud: 
o The interpretation of the analyst can push the patient towards certain 
values and goals that may not be their own, so there is an issue of the power 
of the analyst over the analysand. 
o There is gender bias in Freud’s work. Boys are focused on more than girls – 
girls are held to have less strong identification and so weaker moral 
development. 
o There is undue emphasis on sexual matters, particularly where transference 
occurs, which is about the patient having feelings for the analyst. This is 
ethically very sensitive. 
Power, gender and sexual issues are important to be 
considered when the ethical implications and issues of 
credibility of his work
Sampling Techniques 
 Random Sampling 
Each person in the population has an equal chance of 
being chosen to be in the sample 
 Stratified Sampling 
Ensuring representations from certain groups 
 Volunteer Sampling 
People offer to take part 
 Opportunity Sampling 
Taking whoever is available at that time
Random Sampling 
 Low bias because 
everyone has an 
equal chance of being 
chosen 
 Sample can be 
checked 
mathematically for 
bias 
 Cannot be certain 
that the sample is 
representative of all 
groups/types etc 
 Difficult to access all 
the population so 
that random 
sampling can take 
place
Stratified Sampling 
 All relevant 
group/strata will have 
at least some 
representation 
 Limits the numbers of 
participants needed 
 It is difficult to know 
how many of each 
group is needed in 
order to represent the 
target population 
accurately 
 Relies on researchers 
knowing all the 
required groups/strata, 
forces choice of 
participants and 
proportions of all 
groups so can give bias 
by excluding people
Volunteer Sampling 
 Ethically good 
because people 
volunteer, so are 
willing to be involved. 
 More likely to 
cooperate which 
means there may be 
less social desirability 
and such biases 
 Only certain types o 
people may volunteer 
, so there is bias. 
 May take a long time 
to get enough 
volunteers
Opportunity Sampling 
 More ethical because 
the researcher can 
judge if the participant 
is llikely to be upset by 
the student or is too 
busy to take part. 
 The researcher has 
more control over who 
is chosen and shouls, 
therefore, be able to 
get the sample quickly 
and efficiently 
 Only people availale 
are used and they may 
be a self-selected 
group(e.g. not 
working , so available 
during the day) 
 May not get 
representatives from 
all groups so there 
may be bias

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Psychodynamic approach

  • 2. Methodology  Looks at case studies in general, case studies used in his approach, correlation design, cross-sectional and longitudinal studies and sampling techniques.
  • 3. Case Study research method  That allows data to be gathered in both depth and detail. Study of an individual or group E.g. small no. of kids brought up whilst deprived of any kind of parenting.  Involve programs like – government funding, health promotion  Individual/small group tend to be the focus of the study  Depth + Detail : interviews; questionnaires; observations; gathering as much data as possible.  Central research ‘tool’ – history of the case, background information (qualitative data)  Tests and experiments are possible whilst using this method
  • 4. Case Study Vs. Research methods  Does not give data – it is just a process  Case study history is qualitative data  Actually methods to obtain data within or for a case study via interviews, questionnaires etc  Provides measurable data - quantitative as well as qualitative Case study Research method
  • 5. Triangulation Generate themes (final results) + ideas (hypothesis) Pool data -From a person or a different source - look for common ground Reinforce data from one another
  • 6. Case studies – scientific? YES o Research collects information through study – systematically – evidence is gathered there for any claim by (backed up) o Participant’s (patient/ analysand) claim Interviews , questionnaires, observations are structured. o They are valid and reliable as the IF it is a repeated measures format (replicability) o It is measurable because the format focuses on what a person thinks not feels NO o The type of data is qualitative , it is rich in depth and detail – ecological validity HOWEVER without subjectivity the data can not be analysed; making it experimentally invalid! o Situational variables whilst interpreting the data – time, place, culture, mood etc questioning reliability and validity! G E N E R A L I S I B I L I T Y
  • 7. Precautions…  Researchers deliberately search or “hunt” for evidence going against their prediction or work backwards from their results Reliability Generasibility Validility Application Ethics
  • 8. Case Studies (general analysis)  Study of individual or small groups  In-depth rich data  Mainly qualitative data  Use many research methods such as questionnaires, case histories and observation  Generation of themes  Uses tables of categories  Cross – case analysis  Some quantitative data
  • 9. Evaluation of case study research methods (general) STRENGTHS  Data are valid because they are in depth; detailed and focus on real experiences in a real situation  A valuable research methodology because a case study may be the only way to gather rich, detailed qualitative information in context and with meaning for those concerned. WEAKNESSES  Lacks generalisibility because they are about one individual (for small group) only, so they are specific rather than general and data cannot be applied fairly to others  Hard to replicate, so cannot be tested for reliability, which means data may be subjective and cannot be used to build up a body of knowledge.
  • 10. Freud used case study methods to conduct his research and reinforce his theories. His research was also a therapy for his analysand (participants) AIM: to access the “unconscious” mind – not possible by standard means Freud’s Methods ‘Dream’ and ‘Symbol’ analysis: interpreting dreams by hearing manifest content (the reported dream) and interpreting symbols to uncover the latent content (repressed wish) Slips of the Tongue (Freudian slips) : Mistakes when talking that reveal unconscious desires Free association: Allowing a stream of consciousness to try to access the unconscious
  • 11. Freud’s methods Vs. Case study method Similarities Focuses on qualitative data Gathering of in-depth rich data from one person Differences Focuses on qualitative data Gathering of in-depth rich data from one person
  • 12. Freud’s case studies (general analysis)  Study of an individual  In-depth, rich data  Qualitative data  Uses different techniques such as slips of the tongue, dream analysis and free association  Suggesting interpretation to analysand  To help to reveal unconscious repressed thoughts, emotions and memories  To make the unconscious  conscious  To release the energy to aid symptoms  To give evidence for Freud’s ideas
  • 13. Stengths Vs Weaknesses  Uses different methods to uncover unconscious wishes to access by conventional means  Acts both as a research method and a therapy and allows the analysand to be cured  Involves subjective interpretation by the analyst, so it is not scientific  Cannot be replicated to test for reliability because it focuses on the unique unconscious desires of an individual and the analysis is carried out by one therapist
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  • 15. BPS British Psychological society and other professional bodies outline ethical guidelines that must be followed in research:  Informed consent  Deceit  Debriefing  Competence  Right to withdraw Whatever the research method; case studies are no exceptions
  • 16. Confidentiality and Privacy All data should be kept confidential and private, it cold be argued that the data might be valuable enough to warrant invasion of such – BPS doesn’t support this. Unless the analysand is willing to give consent of this information being revealed.
  • 17. Practitioner’s Ethics  Competence  Obligation  Informed consent  Personal conduct  Access to health records  Confidentiality  Responsibility  Safeguarding fitness to practice  Teaching training + supervision  Publications  Private practice and relations with media
  • 18. Credibility for Freud’s studies Masson (1989)’s criticism +psychoanalysis of Freud: o The interpretation of the analyst can push the patient towards certain values and goals that may not be their own, so there is an issue of the power of the analyst over the analysand. o There is gender bias in Freud’s work. Boys are focused on more than girls – girls are held to have less strong identification and so weaker moral development. o There is undue emphasis on sexual matters, particularly where transference occurs, which is about the patient having feelings for the analyst. This is ethically very sensitive. Power, gender and sexual issues are important to be considered when the ethical implications and issues of credibility of his work
  • 19. Sampling Techniques  Random Sampling Each person in the population has an equal chance of being chosen to be in the sample  Stratified Sampling Ensuring representations from certain groups  Volunteer Sampling People offer to take part  Opportunity Sampling Taking whoever is available at that time
  • 20. Random Sampling  Low bias because everyone has an equal chance of being chosen  Sample can be checked mathematically for bias  Cannot be certain that the sample is representative of all groups/types etc  Difficult to access all the population so that random sampling can take place
  • 21. Stratified Sampling  All relevant group/strata will have at least some representation  Limits the numbers of participants needed  It is difficult to know how many of each group is needed in order to represent the target population accurately  Relies on researchers knowing all the required groups/strata, forces choice of participants and proportions of all groups so can give bias by excluding people
  • 22. Volunteer Sampling  Ethically good because people volunteer, so are willing to be involved.  More likely to cooperate which means there may be less social desirability and such biases  Only certain types o people may volunteer , so there is bias.  May take a long time to get enough volunteers
  • 23. Opportunity Sampling  More ethical because the researcher can judge if the participant is llikely to be upset by the student or is too busy to take part.  The researcher has more control over who is chosen and shouls, therefore, be able to get the sample quickly and efficiently  Only people availale are used and they may be a self-selected group(e.g. not working , so available during the day)  May not get representatives from all groups so there may be bias