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Alexithymia, Irrational Beliefs, and the Rational-Emotive Explanation of Emotional Disturbance
Authors:Scott E. Culhane  P. J. Watson
Affiliation:(1) University of Texas at El Paso, USA;(2) Psychology/Dept.#2803, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, 350 Holt Hall-615 McCallie, Chattanooga, TN, 37403
Abstract:In recent discussions of Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT), Ellis has argued that unconscious processes supplement irrational beliefs in explaining psychopathology. The hypothesis of this investigation was that these unconscious processes reflect alexithymia. University students responded to the three factors from the Toronto Alexithymia Scale, the Malouff and Schutte Belief Scale (MSBS), 5 subscales from the Survey of Personal Beliefs, and instruments recording depression, anxiety, and neuroticism. As hypothesized, alexithymia and irrational beliefs predicted greater emotional disturbance while also displaying some small positive correlations with each other. In multiple regressions, both types of variables combined to predict emotional disturbance, with alexithymia explaining the greater amount of variance. Alexithymic difficulties in identifying emotions had uniquely negative mental health implications. The MSBS and the Low Frustration Tolerance subscale were the most noteworthy measures of a pathogenic irrationality. These data supported the claim that the unconscious processes of REBT could be conceptualized in terms of alexithymia.
Keywords:alexithymia  irrational beliefs  unconscious processes
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