Results 241 to 250 of about 213,425 (292)
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Self-Consciousness in Schizophrenics

Psychological Reports, 1981
This study assessed the efficacy of the Self-consciousness Scale in differentiating short- and long-term schizophrenics from sociopaths and psychiatric aides. Three groups of 10 state hospital residents were selected on the basis of evidence of schizophrenia or antisocial personality using both interview and psychometric measures.
A E, Puente, S, Morrisey
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Paranoia and self-consciousness.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1992
Abstract A series of studies by Fenigstein (1984) suggested that self-consciousness heightened the tendency to engage in seemingly paranoid inferences. Subjects who were high in public self-consciousness (i.e., who tended to focus on the publicly observable aspects of themselves; see Fenigstein, Scheier, & Buss, 1975), compared ...
A, Fenigstein, P A, Vanable
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Correlates of Self-Consciousness

Journal of Personality Assessment, 1978
Examined the relationship between the three subscales of the Self-Consciousness Scale and a variety of other personality dimensions, including measures of reflectivity, self-regulation, and social desirability. Data from six geographically diverse samples (total N = 1395) were presented. In general, both the construct validity and discriminant validity
R G, Turner   +3 more
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Private Self-Consciousness, Public Self-Consciousness, and Trait Anxiety

Psychological Reports, 1981
In 1975, Fenigstein, Scheier, and Buss (2) published a scale to measure individual differences in self-consciousness. Three subscales were differentiated: private self-consciousness, public self-consciousness, and social anxiety. In the initial report, low and nonsignificant correlations of .23 and .26 were reported between private and public self ...
L S, Dickstein, N, Wang, A, Whitaker
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Self-Consciousness

First published in 2017. Most recently revised in 2024.
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Interpersonal Self-Consciousness

Philosophical Studies, 2013
If one were to write a book titled TheVarieties of Self-Consciousness, one would start off with some distinctions. It will help to locate my topic in relation to those distinctions. The first distinction concerns that kind of self-consciousness which involves only the minimal ability on the part of a subject to self-represent, to be in mental states ...
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Self‐consciousness

2010
AbstractThis chapter considers self-consciousness, i.e., condition (5) from Chapter 7. It offers a conventional definition of ‘full’ or ‘express’ self-consciousness, i.e., self-consciousness of the kind possessed by nearly all human beings. According to the definition, to be fully self-conscious is to be able to think of yourself conceived of ...
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