Weighted Implication Grid: a graph-theoretical approach to modeling psychological change construction
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Publication date
2025-10Abstract
Introduction: Anticipation and meaning-making are foundational processes in
Personal Construct Psychology. Over the years, methodologies such as the
Repertory Grid and Implication Grid have provided valuable tools for examining
the anticipatory structure of personal meaning systems. Building on this tradition,
the Weighted Implication Grid (WimpGrid) introduces a graph-theoretic and
algebraic formalization of personal construct systems, aiming to enhance the
modeling of psychological change as a dynamic and networked process.
Method: The WimpGrid is based on a semi-structured interview in which
participants evaluate hypothetical transformations in their self-perception across
a set of personal constructs. These anticipatory judgments are recorded in a
numerical matrix and formalized as a weighted directed graph, where nodes
represent constructs and edges quantify the perceived influence between them.
From this structure, graph-theoretical indices are derived to examine properties
such as construct centrality, system dynamics, and resistance to change.
Applications: WimpGrid enables idiographic assessment in clinical settings,
supporting case formulation, therapeutic planning, and longitudinal monitoring
of psychological transformation. Additionally, it provides a formalized
methodological platform for research into subjective change processes
and personal meaning structures.
Discussion: By combining constructivist interviewing techniques with graphtheoretical modeling, WimpGrid offers a structured and flexible framework
for investigating psychological change. It complements existing constructivist
methodologies by providing tools for the quantitative analysis of complex
meaning systems, and opens new avenues for theoretical refinement and
empirical application.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Keywords
Pages
15
Publisher
Frontiers
Is part of
Frontiers in Physiology, 2025, Vol. 16 (1630920)
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

