Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Inês Mendes is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Inês Mendes.


Psychotherapy Research | 2011

Tracking novelties in psychotherapy process research: The innovative moments coding system

Miguel M. Gonçalves; António P. Ribeiro; Inês Mendes; Marlene Matos; Anita Santos

Abstract This article presents a method for the assessment of innovative moments, which are novelties that emerge in contrast to a clients problematic self-narrative as expressed in therapy, the innovative moments coding system (IMCS). The authors discuss the theoretical background of the IMCS as well as its coding procedures. Results from several studies suggest that the IMCS is a reliable and valid coding system that can be applied to several modalities of psychotherapy. Finally, future research implications are discussed.


Psychotherapy Research | 2010

Narrative change in emotion-focused therapy: How is change constructed through the lens of the innovative moments coding system?

Inês Mendes; António P. Ribeiro; Lynne Angus; Leslie S. Greenberg; Inês Sousa; Miguel M. Gonçalves

Abstract The aim of this study was to advance understanding of how clients construct their own process of change in effective therapy sessions. Toward this end, the authors applied a narrative methodological tool for the study of the change process in emotion-focused therapy (EFT), replicating a previous study done with narrative therapy (NT). The Innovative Moments Coding System (IMCS) was applied to three good-outcome and three poor-outcome cases in EFT for depression to track the innovative moments (IMs), or exceptions to the problematic self-narrative, in the therapeutic conversation. IMCS allows tracking of five types of IMs events: action, reflection, protest, reconceptualization, and performing change. The analysis revealed significant differences between the good-outcome and poor-outcome groups regarding reconceptualization and performing change IMs, replicating the findings from a previous study. Reconceptualization and performing change IMs seem to be vital in the change process.


Journal of Constructivist Psychology | 2010

Innovative Moments and Change in Emotion-Focused Therapy: The Case of Lisa

Miguel M. Gonçalves; Inês Mendes; António P. Ribeiro; Lynne Angus; Leslie S. Greenberg

This article presents an intensive analysis of a good-outcome case of emotion-focused therapy—the case of Lisa—using the Innovative Moments Coding System (IMCS). IMCS, influenced by narrative therapy, conceptualizes narrative change as resulting from the elaboration and expansion of narrative exceptions or unique outcomes to a clients core problematic self-narrative. IMCS identifies and tracks the occurrence of five different types of narrative change: action, reflection, protest, reconceptualization, and performing change. This is the first attempt to use the IMCS with cases outside the narrative tradition. We discuss the results, emphasizing the commonalities and major differences between this case and other good-outcome cases.


Death Studies | 2012

Innovative Moments in Grief Therapy: Reconstructing Meaning Following Perinatal Death.

Daniela Alves; Inês Mendes; Miguel M. Gonçalves; Robert A. Neimeyer

This article presents an intensive analysis of a good outcome case of constructivist grief therapy with a bereaved mother, using the Innovative Moments Coding System (IMCS). Inspired by M. White and D. Epstons narrative therapy, the IMCS conceptualizes therapeutic change as resulting from the elaboration and expansion of unique outcomes (or as we prefer, innovative moments), referring to experiences not predicted by the problematic or dominant self-narrative. The IMCS identifies and tracks the occurrence of 5 different types of innovative moments: action, reflection, protest, re-conceptualization, and performing change. Results documented the process of meaning reconstruction over the 6 sessions of treatment, and demonstrated the feasibility and reliability of analyzing narrative change in this form of grief therapy, opening it to comparison with other approaches.


Psychotherapy Research | 2011

Narrative change in emotion-focused psychotherapy : a study on the evolution of reflection and protest innovative moments

Inês Mendes; António P. Ribeiro; Lynne Angus; Leslie S. Greenberg; Inês Sousa; Miguel M. Gonçalves

Abstract Innovative moments (IMs) are exceptions to a clients problematic self-narrative in the therapeutic dialogue. The innovative moments coding system is a tool which tracks five different types of IMs—action, reflection, protest, reconceptualization and performing change. An in-depth qualitative analysis of six therapeutic cases of emotion-focused therapy (EFT) investigated the role of two of the most common IMs—reflection and protest—in both good and poor outcome cases. Through this analysis two subtypes (I and II) of reflection and protest IMs were identified, revealing different evolution patterns. Subtype II of both reflection and protest IMs is significantly higher in the good outcome group, while subtype I of both IMs types does not present statistically significant differences between groups. The evolution from subtype I to subtype II across the therapeutic process seems to reflect a relevant developmental progression in the change process.


Psychotherapy | 2012

Therapist Interventions and Client Innovative Moments in Emotion-Focused Therapy for Depression

Carla Cunha; Miguel M. Gonçalves; Clara E. Hill; Inês Mendes; António P. Ribeiro; Inês Sousa; Lynne Angus; Leslie S. Greenberg

According to the narrative approach, change in self-narratives is an important part of successful psychotherapy. In this view, several authors have highlighted the usefulness of narrating new experiences (like actions, thoughts, and stories) during therapy in contrast with maladaptive client self-narratives. These new experiences are termed here innovative moments (IMs), and different types can be specified: action, reflection, protest, reconceptualization, and performing change. With the aim of understanding which therapist skills are related to client IMs, we analyzed the association between exploration, insight, and action skills and IMs in two initial, two middle, and two final sessions of three good outcome (GO) and three poor outcome (PO) cases of emotion-focused therapy (EFT) for depression. IMs occurred more often in GO than PO cases. Furthermore, in GO more than PO cases, exploration and insight skills more often preceded action, reflection, and protest IMs in the initial and middle phases of EFT, but more often preceded reconceptualization and performing change IMs in the final phase. Action skills were more often associated with action, reflection, and protest IMs across all phases, especially in the final phase, of GO EFT.


Psychotherapy Research | 2014

Ambivalence in emotion-focused therapy for depression: The maintenance of problematically dominant self-narratives

António P. Ribeiro; Inês Mendes; William B. Stiles; Lynne Angus; Inês Sousa; Miguel M. Gonçalves

Abstract Objective: Ambivalence can be understood as a cyclical movement between an emerging narrative novelty—an Innovative Moment (IM)—and a return to a problematically dominant self-narrative. The return implies that the IM, with its potential for change is devalued right after its emergence. Our goal is to test the hypothesis that the probability of the client expressing such form of ambivalence decreases across treatment in good-outcome cases but not in poor-outcome cases. Method: Return-to-the-Problem Markers (RPMs) signaling moments of devaluation of IMs were coded in passages containing IMs in six clients with major depression treated with emotion-focused therapy: three good-outcome cases and three poor-outcome cases. Results: The percentage of IMs with RPMs decreased across therapy in good-outcome cases, whereas it remained unchanged and high in the poor-outcome cases. Conclusions: These results were consistent with the theoretical suggestion that therapeutic failure may be associated with this form of ambivalence.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Computational models for prediction of yeast strain potential for winemaking from phenotypic profiles.

Inês Mendes; Ricardo Franco-Duarte; Lan Umek; Elza Fonseca; João Drumonde-Neves; Sylvie Dequin; Blaz Zupan; Dorit Elisabeth Schuller

Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains from diverse natural habitats harbour a vast amount of phenotypic diversity, driven by interactions between yeast and the respective environment. In grape juice fermentations, strains are exposed to a wide array of biotic and abiotic stressors, which may lead to strain selection and generate naturally arising strain diversity. Certain phenotypes are of particular interest for the winemaking industry and could be identified by screening of large number of different strains. The objective of the present work was to use data mining approaches to identify those phenotypic tests that are most useful to predict a strains potential for winemaking. We have constituted a S. cerevisiae collection comprising 172 strains of worldwide geographical origins or technological applications. Their phenotype was screened by considering 30 physiological traits that are important from an oenological point of view. Growth in the presence of potassium bisulphite, growth at 40°C, and resistance to ethanol were mostly contributing to strain variability, as shown by the principal component analysis. In the hierarchical clustering of phenotypic profiles the strains isolated from the same wines and vineyards were scattered throughout all clusters, whereas commercial winemaking strains tended to co-cluster. Mann-Whitney test revealed significant associations between phenotypic results and strains technological application or origin. Naïve Bayesian classifier identified 3 of the 30 phenotypic tests of growth in iprodion (0.05 mg/mL), cycloheximide (0.1 µg/mL) and potassium bisulphite (150 mg/mL) that provided most information for the assignment of a strain to the group of commercial strains. The probability of a strain to be assigned to this group was 27% using the entire phenotypic profile and increased to 95%, when only results from the three tests were considered. Results show the usefulness of computational approaches to simplify strain selection procedures.


Electrophoresis | 2011

Genotyping of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains by interdelta sequence typing using automated microfluidics

Ricardo Franco-Duarte; Inês Mendes; Ana Catarina Gomes; Manuel A. S. Santos; Bruno de Sousa; Dorit Elisabeth Schuller

Amplification of genomic sequences flanked by delta elements of retrotransposons TY1 and TY2 is a reliable method for characterization of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains. The aim of this study is to evaluate the usefulness of microfluidic electrophoresis (Caliper LabChip®) to assess the factors that affect interlaboratory reproducibility of interdelta sequence typing for S. cerevisiae strain delimitation. We carried out experiments in two laboratories, using varying combinations of Taq DNA polymerases and thermal cyclers. The reproducibility of the technique is evaluated using non‐parametric statistical tests and we show that the source of Taq DNA polymerase and technical differences between laboratories have the highest impact on reproducibility, whereas thermal cyclers have little impact. We also show that the comparative analysis of interdelta patterns is more reliable when fragment sizes are compared than when absolute and relative DNA concentrations of each band are considered. Interdelta analysis based on a smaller fraction of bands with intermediate sizes between 100 and 1000 bp yields the highest reproducibility.


Psychotherapy Research | 2016

Setbacks in the process of assimilation of problematic experiences in two cases of emotion-focused therapy for depression.

Inês Mendes; Catarina Rosa; William B. Stiles; Isabel Caro Gabalda; Pedro Gomes; Isabel Basto; João Salgado

Abstract Objective: Research on the assimilation model has suggested that psychological change takes place in a sequence of stages punctuated by setbacks, that is, by transient reversals in the developmental course. This study analyzed such setbacks in one good outcome case and one poor outcome case of Emotion-focused therapy (EFT) for depression. Method: Intensive analyses of five transcribed sessions from each case identified 26 setbacks in the good outcome case and 27 in the poor outcome case. The reason for each setback was classified into one of four categories: balance strategy, exceeding the therapeutic zone of proximal development either induced by the therapist (ZPD-T) or induced by the client (ZPD-C), or spontaneous switches. Results: In the good outcome case the most frequent reasons for setbacks were balance strategy and spontaneous switches, whereas in the poor outcome case the most frequent reason for setbacks was ZPD-T. Conclusions: As in previously studied therapies, setbacks in EFT, usually represent productive work on relatively less advanced strands of the clients major problems. Results point to the importance of the therapist attending to the limits of the clients therapeutic ZPD.

Collaboration


Dive into the Inês Mendes's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lan Umek

University of Ljubljana

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge