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Cognitive environments and dissociative tendencies: performance on the standard Stroop task for high versus low dissociators

✍ Scribed by Jennifer J. Freyd; Susan R. Martorello; Jessica S. Alvarado; Amy E. Hayes; Jill C. Christman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
127 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0888-4080

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✦ Synopsis


Dissociative experiences are characterized by a disruption in integration of consciousness, attention, and/or memory. Most individuals have some dissociative experiences (such as `highway hypnosis'), but some individuals have remarkably frequent and intense dissociative experiences (as in the case of Dissociative Identity Disorder ( formerly known as Multiple Personality Disorder)). We hypothesized that individual dierences in dissociative experiences may have an attentional basis and/or eect on attentional mechanisms. We report on a study in which we selected high and low dissociators, as measured by the Dissociative Experiences Scale (Bernstein and Putnam, 1986) and we evaluated each group's performance on a basic Stroop interference task with incongruent colour terms and control stimuli. We found that the high dissociators showed greater Stroop interference than did the low dissociators. We discuss our current theoretical understanding of this relationship in which we speculate that a history of trauma is an important causal factor in both high levels of dissociative experiences and changes in basic attentional strategies and mechanisms.