Alexithymia and the Split Brain: I. Lexical-Level Content Analysis

8 cerebral commissurotomy patients and 8 precision-matched normal control subjects were shown a 3-minute videotaped film symbolically depicting the deaths of a baby and of a boy. After each of 4 showings, all subjects were questioned about the symbolic and emotional contents of the film. Content ana...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychotherapy and psychosomatics 1985-01, Vol.43 (4), p.202-208
Hauptverfasser: TenHouten, W.D., Hoppe, K.D., Bogen, J.E., Walter, D.O.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:8 cerebral commissurotomy patients and 8 precision-matched normal control subjects were shown a 3-minute videotaped film symbolically depicting the deaths of a baby and of a boy. After each of 4 showings, all subjects were questioned about the symbolic and emotional contents of the film. Content analyses of the subjects' spoken and written responses were carried out on the lexical level. The commissurotomized patients, in comparison to their normal controls, used a lower percentage of affect-laden words, had a higher percentage of incomplete sentences, used a higher percentage of auxiliary verbs, and used a lower percentage of adjectives. Commissurotomy patients were significantly closer to the alexithymic pole of a factor derived from these 4 variables.
ISSN:0033-3190
1423-0348
DOI:10.1159/000287880