“…As to therapists' responsiveness within relational dynamics, they identified, for example, therapist timing and attunement, response to underlying relational needs (especially when there is tension), and change of treatment The qualitative studies in this field, while still too few, aim at getting closer to therapists' actual way of working, thinking, and experiencing, including how they process information and form decisions. In-depth interview analyses have demonstrated how therapists draw on their extended repertoire of knowledge sources, involving embodied, implicit decision making and clinical intuition (Bernhardt et al, 2021;Oddli & Halvorsen, 2014;Oddli & McLeod, 2017;Råbu et al, 2021). Qualitative analyses of therapy sessions have identified how decisions evolve as therapists make use of micro-cues along with distinctive linguistic manners, to involve the patient in a meaningful interaction about relevant tasks in therapy and future goals and directions (Oddli & McLeod, 2017;Oddli et al, 2021;Oddli & Rønnestad, 2012;von der Lippe et al, 2019).…”