Publication | Closed Access
Bias in the Counseling Process: How to Recognize and Avoid It
57
Citations
48
References
1992
Year
CounselingSchool CounselingSocial PsychologyInferential BiasEducationCounseling ProcessMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesBiasClinical PsychologyTherapeutic RelationshipCognitive TherapyCognitive Bias MitigationMental Health CounselingUnconscious BiasInferential BiasesBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryPrecautions CounselorsBias DetectionCounselor SupervisionCounselor EducationProfessional CounselingProfessional Counseling OrientationPsychopathology
Counselors' vulnerability to inferential bias during the counseling process may result in misdiagnosis and improper interventions. This article provides readers with information regarding inferential bias. The inferential biases discussed include (a) availability and representativeness heuristics; (b) fundamental attribution error; (c) anchoring, prior knowledge, and labeling; (d) confirmatory hypothesis testing; and (e) reconstructive memory. Each bias is described and illustrated through fictitious case vignettes, and suggestions concerning what precautions counselors may do to avoid each type of bias are presented.
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