Psychometric & psychophysiological measures for schizotypy, creativity & psychoticism
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Degree Grantor
The University of Auckland
Abstract
This thesis was initiated as a study of personality traits and electrophysiological dysfunctions which could underlie schizophrenia and yet which would also be detectable in the normal population, i.e, biological risk markers rather than simple state signs. As it progressed, the thesis came more to focus on individual differences in thinking style including psychoticism as a variable affecting attention, schizotypy, as it conveys a cognitive slippage component which affects the development of thought, and also creativity as it affects the generation of associations. Part one of the thesis reports the development of scale measures of schizotypy and of creativity.
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