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Alexithymia, dissociation, and social desirability: investigating individual differences in the narrative content of false allegations of trauma

Faculty Advisor

Date

2008

Keywords

alexithymia, credibility, dissociation, social desirability, trauma

Abstract (summary)

This study examined the potential influence of alexithymia, dissociation, and social desirability on the narrative features associated with truthful and fabricated traumatic events. Participants (N = 291) wrote narratives describing both genuine and fabricated traumas and completed scales measuring individual differences. Alexithymia was associated with less plausible reports (independent of veracity) and differential reporting of emotional details between narratives. Higher levels of dissociation were related to less coherent and plausible reports, and less contextual detail in fabricated reports. Further, coherence and plausibility ratings fluctuated between low, moderate, and high social desirability groups. These results suggest that individual difference factors are important considerations in the forensic assessment of the veracity of trauma reports.

Publication Information

Peace, K. A., & Bouvier, K. A. M. (2008). Alexithymia, dissociation, and social desirability: Investigating individual differences in the narrative content of false allegations of trauma. Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 47, 138-167. doi: 10.1080/10509670801941035

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

All Rights Reserved