RT Journal DB /z-wcorg/ DS http://worldcat.org ID 264100247 LA English T1 Relationship between self-focused attention and dissociation in patients with and without auditory hallucinations. A1 Perona-Garcelán S, Cuevas-Yust C, García-Montes JM, Pérez-Alvarez M, Ductor-Recuerda MJ, Salas-Azcona R, Gómez-Gómez MT, Rodríguez-Martín B, YR 2008 SN 0022-3018 JF The Journal of nervous and mental disease VO 196 IS 3 SP 190 OP 7 AB The purpose of this work was to study the relationship between self-focused attention and dissociative experiences in 4 groups of subjects: patients with a psychotic disorder who suffer from auditory hallucinations, patients with psychoses who have recovered from their hallucinations, patients with psychoses who have never had them, and a fourth nonclinical group. The private self-consciousness scale, revised version by Scheier and Carver, J Appl Soc Psychol. 1985;15:687-699, was used to measure self-focused attention, and the dissociative experience scale (DES-II, Bernstein and Putnam, J Nerv Ment Dis. 1986;174:727-735) was used for dissociation. The results showed that the attention of subjects with hallucinations was more self-focused than the nonclinical group, but did not differentiate significantly from groups of patients without hallucinations. On the other hand, patients with hallucinations and those recovered from them had a higher percentage of dissociative experiences than the rest of the groups in the total DES-II score and in its 3 factors, dissociative amnesia, depersonalization, and absorption. We also found a positive correlation between self-focusing and dissociative experiences in subjects with hallucinations. The depersonalization factor on the DES-II was the only factor predicting auditory hallucinations. The conclusions discuss the relevance of dissociative factors and self-focused attention to understanding the etiology of auditory hallucinations and their contributions to current cognitive models of hallucinations.