University of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.
Depress Anxiety. 2010 Aug;27(8):775-86. doi: 10.1002/da.20656.
Differences in attentional processes have been linked to the development and maintenance of psychopathology. Shifts in such processes have been described by the constructs Dissociation and Absorption. Dissociation occurs when external and/or internal stimuli are excluded from consciousness due to discrepant, rather than unitary, manifestations of cognitive awareness [Erdelyi MH. 1994: Int J Clin Exp Hypnosis 42:379-390]. In contrast, absorption can be conceptualized by a focus on limited stimuli, to the exclusion of other stimuli, because of unifying, rather than discrepant, manifestations of cognitive awareness. The Dissociative Experiences Scale [DES; Bernstein EM, Putnam FW. 1986: J Nerv Ment Dis 174:727-735] and Tellegen Absorption Scale [TAS; Tellegen A, Atkinson G. 1974: J Abnorm Psychol 83:268-277] are common measures of each construct; however, no factor analyses are available for the TAS and despite accepted overlap, no one has assessed the DES and TAS items simultaneously. Previous research suggests the constructs and factor structures need clarification, possibly including more parsimonious item inclusion [Lyons LC, Crawford HJ. 1997: Person Individ Diff 23:1071-1084]. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the factor structure of the DES and TAS and create a psychometrically stable measure of Dissociation and Absorption.
This study included data from an undergraduate (n=841; 76% women) and a community sample (n=233; 86% women) who each completed the DES and TAS.
Exploratory factor analyses [Osborne JW (ed). 2008: Best Practices in Quantitative Methods. Los Angeles: Sage Publications Inc.] with all DES and TAS items suggested a 15-item 3-factor solution (i.e., imaginative involvement, dissociative amnesia, attentional dissociation). Confirmatory factor analyses resulted in excellent fit indices for the same solution.
The items and factors were conceptualized in line with precedent research as the Attentional Resource Allocation Scale (ARAS). Comprehensive results, implications, and future research directions are discussed.
注意力过程的差异与精神病理学的发展和维持有关。这些过程的转变可以通过分离和吸收这两个结构来描述。当由于认知意识的不一致而非单一表现而将外部和/或内部刺激排除在意识之外时,就会发生分离[Erdelyi MH。1994:国际临床实验催眠杂志 42:379-390]。相比之下,吸收可以通过关注有限的刺激来概念化,因为认知意识的表现是一致的,而不是不一致的,所以会排除其他刺激。分离体验量表[DES;Bernstein EM,Putnam FW。1986:J Nerv Ment Dis 174:727-735]和 Tellegen 吸收量表[TAS;Tellegen A,Atkinson G。1974:J Abnorm Psychol 83:268-277]是每个结构的常用测量工具;但是,TAS 没有因子分析,尽管存在公认的重叠,但没有人同时评估 DES 和 TAS 项目。先前的研究表明,这些结构和因子结构需要澄清,可能包括更简洁的项目纳入[Lyons LC,Crawford HJ。1997:人格与个体差异 23:1071-1084]。本研究的目的是评估 DES 和 TAS 的因子结构,并创建一个分离和吸收的心理测量稳定测量工具。
本研究包括来自本科生(n=841;76%为女性)和社区样本(n=233;86%为女性)的数据,他们每人都完成了 DES 和 TAS。
对所有 DES 和 TAS 项目进行的探索性因子分析[Osborne JW(ed)。2008:定量方法的最佳实践。洛杉矶:Sage 出版公司]表明,有 15 个项目的 3 因子解决方案(即想象性投入、分离性健忘、注意力分离)。相同解决方案的验证性因子分析得出了极好的拟合指数。
项目和因子的概念化与先前的研究一致,即注意力资源分配量表(ARAS)。全面的结果、意义和未来的研究方向都进行了讨论。