Self-focused attention in clinical disorders: review and a conceptual model
- PMID: 2181521
- DOI: 10.1037/0033-2909.107.2.156
Self-focused attention in clinical disorders: review and a conceptual model
Abstract
Working largely independently, numerous investigators have explored the role of self-focused attention in various clinical disorders. This article reviews research examining increased self-focused attention in these disorders. Results indicate that regardless of the particular disorder under investigation, a heightened degree of self-focused attention is found. Hence, as ordinarily conceptualized, self-focused attention has little discriminatory power among different psychological disorders. Using information processing constructs, a somewhat different model of self-focused attention is proposed, and it is suggested that certain deviations in this process constitute a psychopathological kind of attention. A meta-construct model of descriptive psychopathology is then outlined to examine how certain aspects of attention can be considered specific to certain disorders and others common to different disorders.
Comment in
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On the relationship between self-focused attention and psychological disorder: a critical reappraisal.Psychol Bull. 1991 Nov;110(3):538-43; discussion 544-50. doi: 10.1037/0033-2909.110.3.538. Psychol Bull. 1991. PMID: 1758922
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