Social:Photo psychology
Photo psychology or photopsychology is a specialty within psychology dedicated to identifying and analyzing relationships between psychology and photography.[1] Photopsychology traces several points of contact between photography and psychology.[1]
Many forms of photography have been used in psychology including, patient portrait photographs,[2] family photographs,[3][4] ambiguous photographs[5] and photographers' photographs.[6] Forms of psychological practices using photographs include photoanalysis,[3] phototherapy,[4] Walker Visuals,[5] and Reading Pictures.[6]
Timeline
At the 111th APA convention in 2003, Joel Morgovsky, a photographer and retired psychology professor from Brookdale Community College, in Lincroft, New Jersey, alongside three other colleagues, presented a timeline of interactions between photography and psychology (see table below).[1][7][8]
Date | Person | Event | Importance |
---|---|---|---|
1856 | Hugh W. Diamond | Portraits help diagnose, treat, and catalogue patients | First point of contact between photography and psychiatry |
1973 | Robert U. Akeret | Introduces Photoanalysis | Establishes the use of family photographs in psychotherapy |
1983 | Joel Morgovsky | Introduces Reading Pictures | First formal presentation on what would become "reading pictures" |
1986 | Joel Wlaker | Introduces Walker Visuals | First use of ambiguous photographs to be used as projective stimuli for clinical use |
1999 | Judy Weiser | Introduces PhotoTherapy | Establishes loose techniques collectively known as phototherapy |
2003 | Franklin, Formanek, Blum, & Morgovsky | Present photopsychology timeline at 111th APA convention | First symposium identifying interactions between photography and psychology |
Photography in psychotherapy
Patient portraits
In 1856, only a couple of decades after photography began, Hugh W. Diamond, a psychiatrist at the Surrey Asylum in Surrey County, England began taking photographs of his patients to aid in diagnosing and treating them.[9][10][11][12] Since the portraits contained more information about his patients' levels of emotion than language, definitions, or classifications, they helped with more accurate diagnoses.[2][12] For example, mental suffering can be categorized under vague terms such as distress, sorrow, grief, melancholy, anguish, and despair, but a photograph speaks for itself, precisely identifying where the patient is on the scale of unhappiness.[2]
In sharing these portraits with the patients' themselves, Diamond found that the portraits can produce a positive effect on the patients, especially if successive portraits illustrate their progress to recovery.[2] One case study conducted by Diamond revealed how a patient's portraits helped lead to a cure through providing an attainable outside perspective of reality.[2] The patient suffered from delusions which consisted of supposed possession of great wealth and holding status of being a Queen.[2] In seeing her portraits and her frequent conversations about them with her therapist, she was able to gradually let go of her former imagined status.[2]
In addition to helping diagnose and treat his patients, Diamond also suggested that these portraits could help in protection and clear representation of patients in case of readmission; similarly to how mug shots are helpful for prisons with improving certainty of previous conviction and in recapturing someone who might have escaped.[2]
Personal photographs
Photoanalysis, proposed by Robert U. Akeret, is the study of body language in personal photographs (e.g. family photographs) to increase self-awareness, better understand interpersonal relationships, and more accurately recollect past episodic events.[3][13][14] Phototherapy, like photoanalysis, is a therapeutic technique which analyzes personal photographs and the feelings, thoughts, memories, and associations these photos evoke, as a way to deepen insight and enhance communication during therapy session.[4][15] Currently, phototherapy is being practiced by Judy Weiser in Vancouver , Canada in the PhotoTherapy Center.[4][14][15][16]
Ambiguous photographs
Walker Visuals, four 13" x 19" color, ambiguous, abstract, dreamlike, and evocative photographs, were created by psychiatrist and photographer, Joel Walker.[5][17][18][19] Similarly to the Rorschach test, what is perceived when looking at these photographs depends on one's own history, expectations, needs, beliefs, feelings, and what happened just before viewing the image.[5][18] Walker created these images after observing how his patients responded to strange photos he had taken and displayed on his office wall.[5][17] From there, Walker expended his collection to include a range of themes from positive to negative.[5] The images act as representations of his patient's inner world which allow them to better verbalize feelings and memories.[5][17][18] Walker visuals can be used universally across culture, language, education, and class.[5]
Photographers' photographs
Reading Pictures is the study of photographs as reflections of the makers' personal, subjective experiences.[6] Morgovsky, a pioneer in Reading Pictures, established six fundamental mindsets needed for Reading Pictures:[6][20]
- Overcoming The Illusion of Reality (OTIR): Understand that photographs are 2D representations, rather than reality.[6][20]
- The Rule of No Accidents (RNA): Everything in a photograph is there on purpose; created when one makes the decision to expose a moment in time as a representation of a conscious experience.[6][20]
- Free Association (FA): An attitude of openness to projected, emotional content of photograph.[6][20]
- Attribution Process (AP): Guess the cause of observed behavior; ask questions like: "What does it mean that this person would take this particular photograph, of this subject matter, from this point of view, using these methods?".[6][20] This mindset was proposed by Fritz Heider and Harold Kelley.[6]
- Thematic Analysis (TA): Analyze cognitive and emotional themes that run through collections of work to construct a working model of the photographer's experiential world.[6][20]
- Genre and Skill Level (GSL): Take into consideration genre and skill level.[6][20]
- Examples of genre include landscape, still-life, portraiture, documentary, straight, surreal, etc.[6][20]
- Skill level can be classified along levels of articulation (LOA):[6][20]
- Innocent Photographers: camera owners who take pictures on an irregular basis for chronicling family events, vacations, and special moments.[6][20] They do not consider themselves photographers beyond a functional level and articulate themselves the least, but Reading Pictures can still be applied on the work innocents.[6][20]
- Amateur Photographers: people who enjoy photography, join photography societies, and obtain new and updated cameras, lenses, light sources, etc.[6][20] These photographers are less personally expressive, since they are often inspired to imitate work of other photographers they admire, and are masked by attempting to master a technical skill.[6][20]
- Mature Photographers: photographers that consciously use the medium as creative self-expression; they developed their own ways of seeing through the lens and have their own personal style, which is consistent through most of their work.[6][20] This group is the most articulate, so reading a few photos of theirs can provide insight into their personal cognitive and emotional experience.[6][20]
Further reading
- "The Face of Madness: Hugh W. Diamond and the Origin of Psychiatric Photography" by Sander L. Gilman, Hugh W. Diamond, and John Conolly further discusses details of Diamond's contributions to photopsychology .[21]
- "Portraits of the Insane: The Case of Dr. Diamond" by Adrienne Burrows and Iwan Schumacher is a collection of Dr. H.W. Diamond's work.[22]
- "Phototherapy and Therapeutic Photography in a Digital Age" edited by Del Loewenthal provides a foundation of phototherapy and describes the most recent developments.[23]
- "Review of Akeret's Photoanalysis" by Dr. Richard Chalfen, published in: Studies in the Anthropology of Visual Communication.[24]
- "Photolanguage: How Photos Reveal the Fascinating Stories of Our Lives and Relationships" by Robert U. Akeret.[25]
- John Suler's Top 10 Book Reviews & Recommended Readings For Photographic Psychology.[26]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "What is Photo Psychology? | My CMS". http://photopsychology.com/wordpress/what-is-photo-psychology/.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Diamond, Hugh W. (2010). "On the Application of Photography to the Physiognomic and Mental Phenomena of Insanity (1856)*". Piscoart 1: 1–14. https://psicoart.unibo.it/article/download/2090/1478.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Chalfen, Richard (10 January 1974). "Akeret: Photoanalysis". Studies in Visual Communication 1: 57–60. https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/afc0/d7ce28ce77ab9c8e03ccff68d66cd21a3086.pdf.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "PhotoTherapy & Therapeutic Photography Techniques". https://phototherapy-centre.com/.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 Walker, Joel (2009). "The Walker Visuals". Cancerologia 4: 9–18. http://incan-mexico.org/revistainvestiga/elementos/documentosPortada/1257540985.pdf.
- ↑ 6.00 6.01 6.02 6.03 6.04 6.05 6.06 6.07 6.08 6.09 6.10 6.11 6.12 6.13 6.14 6.15 6.16 6.17 6.18 "What is Reading Pictures? | My CMS". http://photopsychology.com/wordpress/what-is-reading-pictures/.
- ↑ "About Joel Morgovsky | My CMS". http://photopsychology.com/wordpress/about-joel-morgovsky/.
- ↑ Morgovsky, Joel (2007). "Photography on the Couch: The Psychological Uses of Photography". The General Psychologist: Division ONE 42: 27–30. http://www.apadivisions.org/division-1/publications/newsletters/general/2007/04-issue.pdf.
- ↑ "D is for… Dr. Hugh Welch Diamond: Photography and the pseudoscience of physiognomy". National Science and Media Museum blog. https://blog.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/a-z-photography-collection-hugh-welch-diamond/.
- ↑ "Hugh Welch Diamond | Patient, Surrey County Lunatic Asylum | The Met". https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/283091.
- ↑ "Hugh Welch Diamond (British, 1809–1886) (Getty Museum)". http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/artists/1805/hugh-welch-diamond-british-1809-1886/.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 "Portraits of Insanity The Photos of Dr. Hugh Welch Diamond". CVLT Nation. 7 November 2014. http://www.cvltnation.com/portraits-of-insanity-the-photos-of-dr-hugh-welch-diamond/.
- ↑ Saffady, William (October 1974). "Manuscripts and Psychohistory". The American Archivist 37 (4): 559. doi:10.17723/aarc.37.4.234216kt88624n30. PMID 11609329.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 "Photographic Psychology: Interpreting People Pics". http://truecenterpublishing.com/photopsy/people_pics.htm.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 "What is PhotoTherapy? | Arts in Therapy Network". http://www.artsintherapy.com/what-is-phototherapy/.
- ↑ "Judy Weiser". PhotoTherapy & Therapeutic Photography Techniques. 2 July 2014. https://phototherapy-centre.com/about-judy-weiser/.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 Jacobs, Nellie (Spring 2002). "A Picture Unleashes a Thousand Words". Medhunters Magazine: 8–10. https://phototherapytherapeuticphotography.files.wordpress.com/2014/10/a_picture_unleashes_a_thousand_words_j-walker_2002.pdf.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 Zakia, Richard (2003). "Perception and Imaging: The Walker Visuals". Perception and Imaging: Photography – A Way of Seeing 4. http://masteringphoto.com/the-walker-visuals/.
- ↑ "Joel Walker, photographer, Psychiatrist". http://www.joelwalker.com/.
- ↑ 20.00 20.01 20.02 20.03 20.04 20.05 20.06 20.07 20.08 20.09 20.10 20.11 20.12 20.13 20.14 Mihailescu, Andrada. "Major Practical Project – Hodie Sum: Joel Morgovsky – Reading Pictures". http://andradamihailescu-mpp.blogspot.com/2013/04/joel-morgovsky-reading-pictures.html.
- ↑ Gilman, Sander L.; Diamond, Hugh W.; Conolly, John (2014) (in English). Face of Madness: Hugh W. Diamond and the Origin of Psychiatric Photography. Echo Point Books & Media. ISBN 978-1626549234.
- ↑ Burrows, Adrienne; Schumacher, Iwan (1990) (in English). Portraits of the Insane: The Case of Dr. Diamond. London; New York: Quartet Books. ISBN 978-0704326149.
- ↑ Loewenthal, Del, ed (2013) (in English). Phototherapy and Therapeutic Photography in a Digital Age (1st ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0415667364.
- ↑ "Richard Chalfen, PhD / Bio & CV". http://www.richardchalfen.com/bio.html.
- ↑ Noble, Barnes &. "Photolanguage: How Photos Reveal the Fascinating Stories of Our Lives and Relationships". https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/photolanguage-robert-u-akeret/1100871813.
- ↑ "Photographic Psychology: Reviews and Recommended Readings". http://truecenterpublishing.com/photopsy/readings.htm.