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Suggestibility and Persistence in Epileptics and Mental Defectives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

Margaret Brady*
Affiliation:
Psychological Laboratory, Institute of Psychiatry, Maudsley Hospital, London S.E.5

Extract

In recent years many attempts have been made to improve methods of temperament testing, and to show the validity of the results by comparing test-scores of groups of subjects known to be differentiated with respect to certain traits (Cattell (1), Eysenck (2), Himmelweit (5)). Thus there has been found a very significant correlation between degree of neuroticism and suggestibility, and a correlation almost as high between degree of neuroticism and persistence. These results have suggested the possibility of using tests of this kind in an attempt to measure the neurotic tendencies of individual subjects, and to screen the more neurotic from types of occupation likely to impose too great a strain on them (Eysenck (3)).

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1948 

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References

(1) Cattell, R., Description and Measurement of Personality. New York: World Book Co.Google Scholar
(2) Eysenck, H. J. (1946), Dimensions of Personality. London: Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
(3) Idem (1947), “Screening-out the Neurotic,” Lancet, 19 April, p. 530 ff. Google Scholar
(4) Idem and Furneaux, (1945), “Primary and Secondary Suggestibility; an Experimental and Statistical Study,” J. Exp. Psychol., 35.Google Scholar
(5) Himmelweit, H. T., Desai, M., and Petrie, A. (1946), “An Experimental Investigation of Neuroticism,” J. Personality, 15, 2.Google Scholar
(6) Hunt, J. McV., Personality and the Behaviour Disorders. Google Scholar
(7) Ryans, D. G. (1939), “The Measurement of Persistence: An Historical Review,” Psychol. Bull., 36.Google Scholar
(8) Thornton, G. R., and Guilford, J. P. (1938), “A Factor Analysis of Some Tests Purporting to Measure Persistence,” Psychol. Bull., 35.Google Scholar
(9) Williams, G. V. (1932), “A Study of the Responses of Three Psychotic Groups to a Test of Suggestibility,” J. Gen. Psychol., 7.Google Scholar
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