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Understanding cognitive failures:
What's dissociation got to do with it?
AMANDA SCHURLE BRUCE,
WILLIAM J. RAY, and RICHARD A. CARLSON
Pennsylvania State University
Intuitively, cognitive failures and dissociation seem to encompass overlapping
mental phenomena. This study used a large sample to examine the nature of
the relationship between these constructs. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and
confirmatory factor analyses were performed on the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire
(CFQ). The single factor resulting from the EFA of the CFQ correlated
significantly with all factors from the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES). A
conjoint item-level factor analysis using all items from both measures was performed,
and two factors resulted. The first included all items from the CFQ and
appeared to describe an absorption-like phenomenon. The second factor's highest
positively loading items assessed more pathological forms of dissociation. Based
on our results, we conclude that the CFQ and DES are assessing similar cognitive
processes and that cognitive failures, as measured by the CFQ, overlap with
nonpathological dissociation.
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