A comparison of metacognitive belief, thought strategies and hallucination in a spiritual and non-spiritual population
This study tested hypotheses about the role of spiritual beliefs in Morrison's (2001) model of hallucination using non-clinical spiritual (church attendees and mediums) and non-spiritual (control) groups. The hypotheses were that metacognitive beliefs about uncontrollability and self-consciousn...
Main Author: | Pattni, Jatin |
---|---|
Published: |
University of Leicester
2004
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.697300 |
Similar Items
-
Responsibility beliefs and thought-action fusion in command hallucinations
by: Abbas, Zarina
Published: (2012) -
Auditory hallucinations : beliefs about voices and perceptions of threat
by: Watkins, Victoria
Published: (2004) -
A qualitative investigation of the relationship between psychosis, positive discontinuous experiences, and spiritual or religious beliefs
by: Marriott, Michael
Published: (2007) -
Creativity and spirituality in coping : a multi-method investigation into the perceived mental health benefits of the creativity-spirituality construct
by: Corry, Dagmar A. S.
Published: (2011) -
The interface between psychotherapy and spiritual direction
by: Hayes, Michael A.
Published: (2005)