Acute shame in response to dissociative detachment: evidence from non-clinical and traumatised samples

Two studies employed a dissociative detachment induction technique to examine if experiences of dissociation increased acute shame feelings. Study 1 recruited college participants, while Study 2 enlisted adults attending treatment for childhood sexual abuse. Two hypotheses were explored: (1) more sh...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cognition and emotion Vol. 35; no. 6; pp. 1150 - 1162
Main Authors: Dorahy, Martin J., Schultz, Abbie, Wooller, Michaela, Clearwater, Ken, Yogeeswaran, Kumar
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Routledge 18-08-2021
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Summary:Two studies employed a dissociative detachment induction technique to examine if experiences of dissociation increased acute shame feelings. Study 1 recruited college participants, while Study 2 enlisted adults attending treatment for childhood sexual abuse. Two hypotheses were explored: (1) more shame would be reported following a dissociative detachment induction than a relaxation induction; and (2) shame would increase when detachment was induced in the relationship context of a close other than when alone. Study 1 (N = 81) effectively induced detachment and participants reported higher shame in this condition compared to the relaxation condition. This effect was maintained when state anxiety was controlled. The relationship context produced no impact on dissociation or shame. Attributions around feeling flawed predominantly linked detachment experiences with subsequent shame feelings. In Study 2 with clinical participants (N = 28), regression analyses showed state shame was predicted by acute detachment after controlling for state anxiety, gender, and trait shame and dissociation. The most common appraisals offered for why detachment led to feelings of shame was being flawed and exposed. Collectively, our findings suggest that increased acute shame results from detachment experiences, making more specific the relationship between shame and dissociation.
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ISSN:0269-9931
1464-0600
DOI:10.1080/02699931.2021.1936461