What is it about?

The Multi-Center Dilemma Project is a collaborative research endeavour aimed at determining the role of dilemmas —a kind of cognitive conflict, detected by using an adaptation of Kelly’s Repertory Grid Technique— in a variety of clinical conditions. Implicative dilemmas appear in one third of the non-clinical group (n = 321) and in about half of the clinical group (n = 286), the latter having a proportion of dilemmas that doubles that of the non-clinical sample. Within the clinical group, we studied 87 subjects, after completing a psychotherapy process, and found that therapy helps to dissolve those dilemmas. We also studied, independently, a group of subjects diagnosed with social phobia (n = 13) and a group diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome (n = 13) in comparison to non-clinical groups. In both health related problems, dilemmas seem to be quite relevant. Altogether, these studies, though preliminary (and with a small group size in some cases), yield a promising perspective to the unexplored area of the role of cognitive conflicts as an issue to consider when trying to understand some clinical conditions, as well as a focus to be dealt with in psychotherapy when dilemmas are identified.

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Why is it important?

We have researched about the role of cognitive conflicts in depression, fibromyalgia, eating disorders, social phobia, irritable bowel syndrome and other conditions

Perspectives

The Multi-Center Dilemma Project is collaborative long-term and ongoing project that has produced many studies and publications since the publication of this paper in 2004, with an increasing number of researchers of different countries involved in it

Professor Guillem Feixas
Universitat de Barcelona

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This page is a summary of: The Multi-Center Dilemma Project: An Investigation on the Role of Cognitive Conflicts in Health, The Spanish Journal of Psychology, May 2004, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s1138741600004765.
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