An examination of waking day stress, personality and emotions in relation to the prediction of nightmare frequency and distress: A pilot study

Q3 Psychology
Kaitlyn E. Davis, Teresa L. Decicco
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to identify how influential waking day stress, personality, and emotions can be on the frequency and distress of nightmares. It was hypothesized that higher ratings of waking day stress, neuroticism, and negative emotions would be associated with increased frequency and distress of nightmares. Participants included 52 individuals who filled out questionnaires such as the Perceived Stress Scale (Cohen, Kamarck, & Mermelstein, 1983) and the Big Five Inventory (John & Srivastava, 1999). The study found that waking day stress, neuroticism, and negative emotions were significantly positively correlated with nightmare distress. In contrast, extraversion was significantly negatively associated with nightmare frequency, whereas openness to experience had a significant positive correlation with nightmare frequency. This study used self-report data in order to understand which aspects of waking day life can have an impact on nightmare frequency and distress. Limitations and future directions are also addressed.
对醒着的白天压力、性格和情绪与预测噩梦频率和痛苦的关系的研究:一项初步研究
这项研究的目的是确定清醒时的压力、性格和情绪对噩梦的频率和痛苦的影响。据推测,清醒时压力、神经质和负面情绪的评分越高,噩梦的频率和痛苦就会增加。参与者包括52名填写问卷的个人,如感知压力量表(Cohen,Kamarck,&Mermelstein,1983)和五大清单(John&Srivastava,1999)。研究发现,清醒时的压力、神经质和负面情绪与噩梦痛苦显著正相关。相反,外向与噩梦频率呈显著负相关,而对经验的开放与噩梦频率呈正相关。这项研究使用了自我报告数据,以了解清醒的日常生活的哪些方面会对噩梦的频率和痛苦产生影响。还讨论了限制和未来方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Dream Research
International Journal of Dream Research Psychology-Psychology (all)
CiteScore
1.60
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0.00%
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