Communication deviance

Communication deviance (CD) occurs when a speaker fails to effectively communicate meaning to their listener with confusing speech patterns or illogical patterns.[1] These disturbances can range from vague linguistic references, contradictory statements to more encompassing non-verbal problems at the level of turn-taking. The term was originally introduced by Wynne and Singer in 1963 to describe a communication style found among parents who had children with schizophrenia.[2] A recent meta-analysis reported that communication deviance is highly prevalent in parents of patients diagnosed with schizophrenia [3] and adoption studies have reported significant associations between CD in the parent and thought disorder in the offspring,[4] however, the mechanisms by which CD impacts on the offspring's cognition are still unknown.

The research of psychiatrists and psychoanalysts Lyman Wynne and Theodore Lidz on communication deviance and roles (e.g., pseudo-mutuality, pseudo-hostility, schism and skew) in families of people with schizophrenia also became influential with systems-communications-oriented theorists and therapists.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. Singer, MT; Wynne, LC (August 1966). "Principles for scoring communication defects and deviances in parents of schizophrenics: Rorschach and TAT scoring manuals.". Psychiatry 29 (3): 260–88. PMID 5969538.
  2. Andrés Martin; Fred R. Volkmar; Melvin Lewis (2007). Lewis's Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: A Comprehensive Textbook. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 862. ISBN 978-0-7817-6214-4.
  3. de Sousa, P.; Varese, F.; Sellwood, W.; Bentall, R. P. (25 June 2013). "Parental Communication and Psychosis: A Meta-analysis". Schizophrenia Bulletin 40 (4): 756–768. doi:10.1093/schbul/sbt088.
  4. Wahlberg, KE; Wynne, LC; Oja, H; Keskitalo, P; Anais-Tanner, H; Koistinen, P; Tarvainen, T; Hakko, H; Lahti; Moring, J; Naarala, M; Sorri, A; Tienari, P (January 2000). "Thought disorder index of Finnish adoptees and communication deviance of their adoptive parents.". Psychological Medicine 30 (1): 127–36. doi:10.1017/s0033291799001415. PMID 10722183.
  5. Sholevar, G.P. (2003). Family Theory and Therapy. In Sholevar, G.P. & Schwoeri, L.D. Textbook of Family and Couples Therapy: Clinical Applications. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing Inc.
  6. Barker, P. (2007). Basic family therapy; 5th edition. Wiley-Blackwell.


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