One subject term, critical expression, key phrase, abbreviation, indexing word, etc., that is associated with the whole document and can be used for identification, searching, and indexing purposes
Previous DTD Relationship. In the contentItem DTD, the language element was placed on the individual keyword.
In this DTD, the @xml:lang is placed on groups of keywords (<kwd-group>).
(#PCDATA | bold | italic | monospace | overline | roman | sans-serif | sc | strike | underline | sub | sup)*
Any combination of:
... <volume>45</volume> <issue>3</issue> <fpage>281</fpage> <lpage>297</lpage> <permissions copyright-status="active"> <copyright-statement>Copyright 2008 by the American Psychological Association</copyright-statement> <copyright-year>2008</copyright-year> <copyright-holder>American Psychological Association</copyright-holder> </permissions> <abstract xml:lang="en"> <p align="left">The authors examined immediacy (i.e., discussions about the here-and-now therapeutic relationship) in a 12-session case of individual interpersonal psychotherapy. Therapist immediacy during immediacy events most often focused on parallels between external relationships and the therapy relationship, encouraging expression of immediate feelings, processing termination, therapist expressing disappointment/sadness/hurt and inquiring about the client's reactions. Client involvement was slightly higher before and after than during immediacy events. On the positive side, therapist immediacy seemed to help the client express her immediate feelings about the therapist more openly, feel closer to the therapist, and become less defended. On the negative side, the client felt somewhat awkward and pressured when the therapist used immediacy. Limitations and implications for practice and research are discussed. </p></abstract> <kwd-group xml:lang="en"> <kwd>immediacy</kwd> <kwd>therapeutic relationship</kwd> <kwd>psychotherapy process</kwd> </kwd-group>...
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