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Journal Article

Citation

Anchor KN, Sandler HM, Cherones JH. J. Clin. Psychol. (Hoboken) 1977; 33(4): 947-949.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1977, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

925182

Abstract

Psychotherapy research literature suggests that maladjustment and self-disclosure patterns are related. Male psychiatric patients (23-37 years) were selected according to a stratified random sampling procedure with conditions for Ss: (a) who actually have engaged in maladaptive antisocial aggression (N = 41); (b) who exhibited aggressive impulses, urges, or fantasies (N = 111); and (c) who served as patient (N = 105) and non-patient (N = 137) controls. Results of this study supported the prediction that those patients who actually engaged in maladaptive antisocial aggression employed fewer outlets for self-disclosure than any of the other patient or non-patient groupings. Clinical implications that concerned the actual range of an individual's outlets for intimacy as predictive of maladaptive antisocial aggression in male adults were discussed.


Language: en

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