Hartmann E, Russ D, van der Kolk B, Falke R, Oldfield M
Am J Psychiatry. 1981 Jun;138(6):794-7. doi: 10.1176/ajp.138.6.794.
Through psychiatric interviews and psychological tests the authors studied 38 adults who reported experiencing at least one nightmare per week. Nearly all of the subjects had a lifelong history of frequent nightmares. Four of the subjects met DSM-III criteria for schizophrenia, 9 met the criteria for borderline personality, and 6 met the criteria for schizotypal personality. The others had no specific diagnosis, and none of the subjects had a diagnosis of typical neurosis. Many had mentally ill relatives. Most had artistic interests and talents. These nightmare sufferers may be seen as unusually vulnerable, with a potential for mental illness--especially schizophrenia--as well as a potential for artistic achievement.
通过精神病学访谈和心理测试,作者对38名成年人进行了研究,这些人报告称每周至少经历一次噩梦。几乎所有受试者都有长期频繁做噩梦的历史。其中4名受试者符合精神分裂症的DSM-III标准,9名符合边缘型人格标准,6名符合分裂型人格标准。其他人没有明确诊断,所有受试者均未被诊断为典型神经症。许多人有患精神疾病的亲属。大多数人有艺术兴趣和天赋。这些噩梦患者可能被视为异常脆弱,有患精神疾病——尤其是精神分裂症——的可能性,也有取得艺术成就的潜力。