SUPPORT THE WORK

GetWiki

decisional balance sheet

ARTICLE SUBJECTS
aesthetics  →
being  →
complexity  →
database  →
enterprise  →
ethics  →
fiction  →
history  →
internet  →
knowledge  →
language  →
licensing  →
linux  →
logic  →
method  →
news  →
perception  →
philosophy  →
policy  →
purpose  →
religion  →
science  →
sociology  →
software  →
truth  →
unix  →
wiki  →
ARTICLE TYPES
essay  →
feed  →
help  →
system  →
wiki  →
ARTICLE ORIGINS
critical  →
discussion  →
forked  →
imported  →
original  →
decisional balance sheet
[ temporary import ]
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
{{short description|Tool for representing pros and cons}}A decisional balance sheet or decision balance sheet is a tabular method for representing the pros and cons of different choices and for helping someone decide what to do in a certain circumstance. It is often used in working with ambivalence in people who are engaged in behaviours that are harmful to their health (for example, problematic substance use or excessive eating),{{harvnb|DiClemente|2003|pp=74–77, 141–146}}; {{harvnb|Freimuth|2008|pp=226–231}}; {{harvnb|Walters|Rotgers|2012|pp=14–15}} as part of psychological approaches such as those based on the transtheoretical model of change,{{harvnb|Prochaska|Velicer|Rossi|Goldstein|1994}}; {{harvnb|DiClemente|2003}}; {{harvnb|Norcross|Loberg|Norcross|2012}} and in certain circumstances in motivational interviewing.{{harvnb|Miller|Rollnick|2013|pp=231–254}}; see also the section titled "MI is not a decisional balance" in {{harvnb|Miller|Rollnick|2009|pp=132–133}}

Use and history

The decisional balance sheet records the advantages and disadvantages of different options. It can be used both for individual and organisational decisions. The balance sheet recognises that both gains and losses can be consequences of a single decision. It might, for example, be introduced in a session with someone who is experiencing problems with their alcohol consumption with a question such as: "Could you tell me what you get out of your drinking and what you perhaps find less good about it?" Therapists are generally advised to use this sort of phrasing rather than a blunter injunction to think about the negative aspects of problematic behaviour, as the latter could increase psychological resistance.{{harvnb|Roes|2002|p=83}}An early use of a decisional balance sheet was by Benjamin Franklin. In a 1772 letter to Joseph Priestley, Franklin described his own use of the method,{{harvnb|Franklin|1975}} which is now often called the Ben Franklin method.For examples of modern usage of the phrase "Ben Franklin method", see: {{harvnb|Suhr|1999|p=209}}; {{harvnb|Ullman|2006|pp=42–43}} It involves making a list of pros and cons, estimating the importance of each one, eliminating items from the pros and cons lists of roughly equal importance (or groups of items that can cancel each other out) until one column (pro or con) is dominant. Experts on decision support systems for practical reasoning have warned that the Ben Franklin method is only appropriate for very informal decision making: "A weakness in applying this rough-and-ready approach is a poverty of imagination and lack of background knowledge required to generate a full enough range and detail of competing considerations."{{harvnb|Girle|Hitchcock|McBurney|Verheij|2004}} Social psychologist Timothy D. Wilson has warned that the Ben Franklin method can be used in ways that fool people into falsely believing rationalisations that do not accurately reflect their true motivations or predict their future behaviour.{{harvnb|Wilson|2002|pp=166–175}}In papers from 1959 onwards, Irving Janis and Leon Mann coined the phrase decisional balance sheet and used the concept as a way of looking at decision-making.{{harvnb|Janis|1959}}; {{harvnb|Janis|Mann|1977|pp=135ff}}; Janis said that his balance sheet made "a considerable extension of psychological inquiry beyond the conventional discussions of decision-making" due to its novel inclusion of social, preconscious, and unconscious motives: {{harvnb|Janis|1959|p=19}} James O. Prochaska and colleagues then incorporated Janis and Mann's concept into the transtheoretical model of change,{{harvnb|Velicer|DiClemente|Prochaska|Brandenburg|1985}} an integrative theory of therapy that is widely used for facilitating behaviour change. Research studies on the transtheoretical model suggest that, in general, for people to succeed at behaviour change, the pros of change should outweigh the cons before they move from the contemplation stage to the action stage of change.{{harvnb|DiClemente|2003|pp=36–37}}; {{harvnb|Norcross|Loberg|Norcross|2012|p=77}} Thus, the balance sheet is both an informal measure of readiness for change and an aid for decision-making.Les Greenberg noted that Janis and Mann's description of decisional conflict is similar to the idea of conflict splits in Gestalt therapy, and experiential techniques such as the two-chair dialogue technique are another way of resolving such conflict: {{harvnb|Greenberg|Webster|1982|pp=468–469}}One research paper reported that combining the decisional balance sheet technique with the implementation intentions technique was "more effective in increasing exercise behaviour than a control or either strategy alone."{{harvnb|Prestwich|Lawton|Conner|2003}} Another research paper said that a decisional balance intervention may strengthen a person's commitment to change when that person has already made a commitment to change, but could decrease commitment to change if that person is ambivalent; the authors suggested that evocation of change talk (a technique from motivational interviewing) is more appropriate than a decisional balance sheet when a clinician intends to help ambivalent clients resolve their ambivalence in the direction of change.{{harvnb|Miller|Rose|2015}} William R. Miller and Stephen Rollnick's textbook on motivational interviewing discusses decisional balance in a chapter titled "Counseling with Neutrality", and describes "decisional balance as a way of proceeding when you wish to counsel with neutrality rather than move toward a particular change goal".{{harvnb|Miller|Rollnick|2013|p=36}}

Variations

There are several variations of the decisional balance sheet.Some early variations, in addition to those discussed here, can be found in: {{harvnb|Horan|1979}} In Janis and Mann's original description there are eight or more cells depending on how many choices there are.An example of an eight-cell balance sheet using Janis and Mann's original categories can be seen at WEB, Sample career decision balance sheet,weblink careerkey.org, 12 July 2015, For each new choice there are pairs of cells (one for advantages, one for disadvantages) for these four different aspects:{{harvnb|Velicer|DiClemente|Prochaska|Brandenburg|1985|pp=1279–1280}}anticipated utilitarian effects for selfanticipated utilitarian effects for significant othersanticipated effect on how one is regarded by significant othersanticipated effects on how one views oneselfJohn C. Norcross is among the psychologists who have simplified the balance sheet to four cells: the pros and cons of changing, for self and for others.{{harvnb|Norcross|Loberg|Norcross|2012|p=76}} Similarly, a number of psychologists have simplified the balance sheet to a four-cell format consisting of the pros and cons of the current behaviour and of a changed behaviour.For example: {{harvnb|Tschudi|1977}}; {{harvnb|Freimuth|2008}} Some authors separate out short- and long-term benefits and risks of a behaviour.For example: {{harvnb|Dixon|Glover|1984|pp=178–180}}; {{harvnb|Roes|2002|p=84}} The example below allows for three options: carrying on as before, reducing a harmful behaviour to a level where it might be less harmful, or stopping it altogether; it therefore has six cells consisting of a pro and con pair for each of the three options.
{| class="wikitable"|+ Example of decisional balance sheet for someone experiencing alcohol problems! ! Plusses! Minuses
| Continue drinking as I am| It's what my friends doIt makes me less anxiousIt's fun being drunkI like the taste| I get into fightsHealth problemsDivorce threatDebtsI can't remember things the next day
| Cut down| I can still meet my friendsIt will help my health| Will my partner believe me?Can I stick to it?
| Stop drinking| I won't get into fights any moreIt will please my partnerIt will save moneyGood for my health| I might have to avoid my friendsHow will I cope with anxiety?What will I do for fun?
Any evaluation is subject to change and often the cells are inter-connected. For example, looking at the table above, if something were to happen in the individual's marital life (an argument or the partner leaves or becomes pregnant or has an accident), the event can either increase or decrease how much weight the person gives to the elements in the balance sheet that refer to the relationship.Another refinement of the balance sheet is to use a scoring system to give numerical weights to different elements of the balance sheet; in such cases, the balance sheet becomes what is often called a decision matrix.For example, such a weighted version is used to help readers choose between colleges in: {{harvnb|Lock|2005|pp=317ff}}Similarly, Fabio Losa and Valerie Belton combined drama theory and multiple-criteria decision analysis, two decision-making techniques from the field of operations research, and applied them to an example of interpersonal conflict over substance abuse, which they described as follows:A couple, Jo and Chris, have lived together for a number of years. However, Chris cannot stand any longer that Jo is always drunk and threatens to leave. The scene setting establishes the initial frame, the situation seen by a particular actor (Chris) at a specific point. The actors are Jo and Chris and each has a single yes/no policy option—for Chris this is to stay or leave and for Jo it is to stop drinking or not. These options define four possible scenarios or futures...{{harvnb|Losa|Belton|2006|pp=511}}Dialectical behavior therapy includes a form of decisional balance sheet called a pros and cons grid.{{harvnb|Linehan|2015|pp=132, 427–430}}Kickstarter co-founder Yancey Strickler created a four-cell matrix similar in appearance to a decisional balance sheet that he compared to a bento box, with cells for self and others, present and future.{{harvnb|Strickler|2019}}; Strickler's matrix is also explained on a website: WEB, Bentoism,weblink bentoism.org, 2019-11-17,

ABC model

Psychology professor (:no:Finn Tschudi|Finn Tschudi)'s ABC model of psychotherapy uses a structure similar to a decisional balance sheet: A is a row that defines the problem; B is a row that lists schemas (tacit assumptions) about the advantages and disadvantages of resolving the problem; and C is a row that lists schemas about the advantages and disadvantages of maintaining the problem.{{harvnb|Tschudi|1977}}; {{harvnb|Tschudi|Winter|2011}} Tschudi was partly inspired by Harold Greenwald's book Decision Therapy,{{harvnb|Greenwald|1973}}; {{harvnb|Tschudi|1977|p=323}} which posited that much of psychotherapy involves helping people make decisions.The other major influence on the ABC model was personal construct theory: {{harvnb|Tschudi|1977|p=323}} In the ABC model, people are said to be blocked or stuck in resolving a problem when their C schemas define strong advantages to maintaining the problem and/or strong disadvantages to resolving the problem, and often their C schemas are at a low level of awareness.{{harvnb|Tschudi|Winter|2011|p=93}} In such cases, resolving the problem usually requires raising awareness and restructuring the C schemas, although several other general strategies for resolving the problem are available as alternatives or adjuncts.{{harvnb|Tschudi|1977|pp=331–333}}In an approach to psychotherapy called coherence therapy, A is called the symptom, B is called the anti-symptom position and C is called the pro-symptom position,{{harvnb|Tschudi|Winter|2011|p=91}} although coherence therapy also differentiates between "functional" symptoms that are directly caused by C and "functionless" symptoms that are not directly caused by C.{{harvnb|Ecker|Ticic|Hulley|2012|p=48}} In terms of behaviour modification, the problematic half of A describes one or more costly operants, and C describes the reinforcement that the operant provides.{{harvnb|Tschudi|1977|pp=336–337}}The following table summarizes the structure of the ABC model.{| class="wikitable"|+ The ABC model| A = problem
1}} = problem position (PP)2}} = desired position (DP)
| B = elaboration of A
1}} = disadvantages of PP2}} = advantages of DP
| C = defines dilemma
2}} = advantages of PP1}} = disadvantages of DP

Four square tool

In an approach to psychotherapy called focused acceptance and commitment therapy (FACT) the four square tool is a tabular method similar in appearance to a decisional balance sheet.{{harvnb|Strosahl|Gustavsson|Robinson|2012|pp=265–272}} The four square tool shows four sets of behaviors: positive behaviors (called "workable" behaviors) and negative behaviors (called "unworkable" behaviors) that a person does publicly and privately. In the four square tool, the advantages and disadvantages of the behaviors are implied, rather than listed in separate cells as in a decisional balance sheet. The following table is a blank four square tool.{| class="wikitable"Acceptance and commitment therapy>FACT!! Not working(do less)! More workable(do more)
! Publicbehavior| |
! Privatebehavior| |

See also

{{Div col|colwidth=22em}}
  • {{annotated link|Analysis paralysis}}
  • {{annotated link|Cost–benefit analysis}}
  • {{annotated link|Decision cycle}}
  • {{annotated link|Decision tree}}
  • {{annotated link|Formula for change}}
  • Immunity to change
  • Issue mapping{{snd}}Diagram in which pros and cons are types of nodes
  • {{annotated link|Motivational salience}}
  • {{annotated link|Opportunity cost}}
  • {{annotated link|Practical reason}}
  • {{annotated link|Psychological dependence}}
  • {{annotated link|Reflective equilibrium}}
  • {{annotated link|SWOT analysis}}
  • {{annotated link|Trade-off}}
  • {{annotated link|Unintended consequences}}
{{Div col end}}

Notes

{{Reflist|colwidth=22em}}

References

  • BOOK, DiClemente, Carlo C., 2003, Addiction and change: how addictions develop and addicted people recover, New York, Guilford Press, 978-1572300576, 50684146,weblink limited,
  • BOOK, Dixon, David N., Glover, John A., 1984, Counseling: a problem-solving approach, New York, John Wiley & Sons, 978-0471888772, 10046418,weblink registration,
  • BOOK, Ecker, Bruce, Ticic, Robin, Hulley, Laurel, 2012, Unlocking the emotional brain: eliminating symptoms at their roots using memory reconsolidation, New York, Routledge, 9780415897167, 772112300,weblink limited,
  • BOOK, Franklin, Benjamin, Benjamin Franklin, 1975, 1772, To Joseph Priestley, Willcox, William Bradford, The papers of Benjamin Franklin: January 1 through December 31, 1772, 19, New Haven, Yale University Press, 299–300, 978-0300018653, 310601,weblink
  • BOOK, Freimuth, Marilyn, 2008, Unmasking addiction and preparing for change, Addicted?: recognizing destructive behavior before it's too late, Lanham, MD, Rowman & Littlefield, 211–239, 9780742560253, 183258453,weblink registration,
  • BOOK, Girle, Rod, Hitchcock, David, McBurney, Peter, Verheij, Bart, 2004, Decision support for practical reasoning, Reed, Chris, Norman, Timothy J., Argumentation machines: new frontiers in argument and computation, Argumentation library, 9, Boston, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 55–83, 978-1402018114, 53814623, 10.1007/978-94-017-0431-1_3,weblink registration,
  • JOURNAL, Greenberg, Leslie S., Les Greenberg, Webster, Michael C., September 1982, Resolving decisional conflict by Gestalt two-chair dialogue: relating process to outcome, Journal of Counseling Psychology, 29, 5, 468–477, 10.1037/0022-0167.29.5.468,weblink 10.1.1.471.5776,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20150714023520weblink">weblink 2015-07-14, dead,
  • BOOK, Greenwald, Harold, Harold Greenwald, 1973, Decision therapy, New York, P.H. Wyden, 707490,
  • BOOK, Horan, John J., 1979, Counseling for effective decision making: a cognitive-behavioral perspective, North Scituate, MA, Duxbury Press, 978-0878721955, 4114485,weblink registration, Alternative HTML version: WEB, Counseling for effective decision making, horan.asu.edu,weblink 2015-07-13,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160304104634weblink">weblink 2016-03-04, dead,
  • JOURNAL, Janis, Irving L., Irving Janis, March 1959, Decisional conflicts: a theoretical analysis, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 3, 1, 6–27, 10.1177/002200275900300102, 172865, 143316864,
  • BOOK, Janis, Irving L., Irving Janis, Mann, Leon, 1977, Decision making: a psychological analysis of conflict, choice, and commitment, New York, Free Press (publisher), Free Press, 978-0029161609, 2542340,weblink registration,
  • BOOK, Linehan, Marsha M., Marsha M. Linehan, 2015, 1993, DBT skills training manual, 2nd, New York, Guilford Press, 9781462516995, 883366057,weblink registration,
  • BOOK, Lock, Robert D., 2005, 1992, Taking charge of your career direction, 5th, Career planning guide, 1, Belmont, CA, Thomson Brooks/Cole, 978-0534574260, 56967151,weblink registration,
  • JOURNAL, Losa, Fabio Beniamino, Belton, Valerie, Valerie Belton, May 2006, Combining MCDA and conflict analysis: an exploratory application of an integrated approach, Journal of the Operational Research Society, 57, 5, 510–525, 10.1057/palgrave.jors.2602034, 4102448, 5605202,
  • JOURNAL, Miller, William R., William R. Miller (psychologist), Rollnick, Stephen, Stephen Rollnick, March 2009, Ten things that motivational interviewing is not, Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 37, 2, 129–140, 10.1017/S1352465809005128, 19364414, 35320869,weblink
  • BOOK, Miller, William R., William R. Miller (psychologist), Rollnick, Stephen, Stephen Rollnick, 2013, 1991, Motivational interviewing: helping people change, 3rd, Applications of motivational interviewing, New York, Guilford Press, 9781609182274, 788281018,weblink registration,
  • JOURNAL, Miller, William R., William R. Miller (psychologist), Rose, Gary S., March 2015, Motivational interviewing and decisional balance: contrasting responses to client ambivalence, Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 43, 2, 129–141, 10.1017/S1352465813000878, 24229732, free,
  • BOOK, Norcross, John C., John C. Norcross, Loberg, Kristin, Norcross, Jonathon, 2012, Changeology: 5 steps to realizing your goals and resolutions, New York, Simon & Schuster, 9781451657616, 779265892,weblink registration,
  • JOURNAL, Prestwich, Andrew, Lawton, Rebecca, Conner, Mark, December 2003, The use of implementation intentions and the decision balance sheet in promoting exercise behaviour, Psychology & Health, 18, 6, 707–721, 10.1080/08870440310001594493, 143757202,weblink
  • JOURNAL, Prochaska, James O., James O. Prochaska, Velicer, Wayne F., Rossi, Joseph S., Goldstein, Michael G., Bess Marcus, Marcus, Bess H., Rakowski, William, Fiore, Christine, Harlow, Lisa L., Redding, Colleen A., Rosenbloom, Dena, January 1994, Stages of change and decisional balance for 12 problem behaviors, Health Psychology (journal), Health Psychology, 13, 1, 39–46, 10.1037/0278-6133.13.1.39, 8168470,weblink
  • BOOK, Roes, Nicholas A., 2002, Solutions for the "treatment-resistant" addicted client: therapeutic techniques for engaging difficult clients, New York, Haworth Press, 978-0789011213, 45715882,weblink registration,
  • MAGAZINE, Strickler, Yancey, 5 November 2019, How the bento box can change how we think about the world, Time (magazine), Time,weblink 2019-11-05,
  • BOOK, Strosahl, Kirk, Gustavsson, Thomas, Robinson, Patricia A., 2012, Brief interventions for radical change: principles and practice of focused acceptance and commitment therapy, Oakland, CA, New Harbinger Publications, 9781608823451, 774496029,
  • BOOK, Suhr, Jim, 1999, The choosing by advantages decisionmaking system, Westport, CT, Quorum, 978-1567202175, 38862607,weblink registration,
  • BOOK, Tschudi, Finn, 1977, Loaded and honest questions: a construct theory view of symptoms and therapy, Bannister, Donald, New perspectives in personal construct theory, London; New York, Academic Press, 321–350, 978-0120779406, 10274182,weblink
  • BOOK, Tschudi, Finn, Winter, David A., 2011, The ABC model revisited, Caputi, Peter, Viney, Linda L., Walker, Beverly M., Crittenden, Nadia, Personal construct methodology, Malden, MA, John Wiley & Sons, 89–108, 9780470770870, 730906380, 10.1002/9781119953616.ch4,weblink
  • BOOK, Ullman, David G., 2006, Making robust decisions: decision management for technical, business, and service teams, Victoria, BC, Trafford, 9781425109561, 81600845,weblink registration,
  • JOURNAL, Velicer, Wayne F., DiClemente, Carlo C., Prochaska, James O., James O. Prochaska, Brandenburg, Nancy, May 1985, Decisional balance measure for assessing and predicting smoking status, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 48, 5, 1279–1289, 10.1037/0022-3514.48.5.1279, 3998990,weblink
  • BOOK, Walters, Scott T., Rotgers, Frederick, 2012, 1996, Treating substance abuse: theory and technique, 3rd, New York, Guilford Press, 9781462502578, 730404390,weblink registration,
  • BOOK, Wilson, Timothy D., Timothy D. Wilson, 2002, Introspection and self-narratives, Strangers to ourselves: discovering the adaptive unconscious, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 159–182, 978-0674009363, 49355958,weblink limited,


- content above as imported from Wikipedia
- "decisional balance sheet" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 5:03am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
[ this remote article is provided by Wikipedia ]
LATEST EDITS [ see all ]
GETWIKI 23 MAY 2022
GETWIKI 09 JUL 2019
Eastern Philosophy
History of Philosophy
GETWIKI 09 MAY 2016
GETWIKI 18 OCT 2015
M.R.M. Parrott
Biographies
GETWIKI 20 AUG 2014
CONNECT