Symptom overreporting and dissociative experiences: A qualitative review |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Manchester, 2nd Floor, Zochonis Building, Brunswick Street, Manchester M13 9PL, UK;2. Spectrum Centre for Mental Health Research, Division of Health Research, Furness Building, Lancaster University, LA1 4YG, UK |
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Abstract: | We discuss a phenomenon that has received little attention to date in research on dissociative phenomena, namely that self-reports of these phenomena overlap with the tendency to overendorse eccentric items. We review the literature documenting the dissociation-overreporting link and then briefly discuss various interpretations of this link: (1) overreporting is an artifact of measuring dissociative symptoms; (2) dissociative psychopathology engenders overreporting of eccentric symptoms through fantasy proneness or impairments in internal monitoring; (3) an overreporting response style as is evident in malingerers, for example, promotes reports of dissociative symptoms. These three interpretations are not mutually exclusive. Also, the dissociation-overreporting link may have different origins among different samples. Because overreporting may introduce noise in datasets, we need more research specifically aimed at disentangling the dissociation-overreporting link. We suggest various avenues to accomplish this goal. |
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Keywords: | Dissociative symptoms Overreporting Alexithymia Malingering |
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