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Fantasy proneness, paranormal beliefs and personality features in out-of-body experiences

American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis,  Apr 2005  

Gow, K., Lang, T., & Chant, D. (2004). Fantasy proneness, paranormal beliefs and personality features in out-of-body experiences. Contemporary Hypnosis, 27(3), 107-125. This study investigated the relationship between reported out-of-body experiences, certain psychological variables and personality characteristics.

One hundred and sixty-seven participants completed a series of questionnaires to investigate differences amongst those participants reporting out-of-body experiences and those who were classified as believers or non-believers on: fantasy proneness, paranormal beliefs, psychological absorption, psychological association, somatoform dissociation, certain personality characteristics, and OBE experience sensations. The findings revealed that experients were more fantasy prone, higher in their belief in the paranormal, and displayed greater somatoform dissociation. Psychological absorption and dissociation were higher for believers than for either experients or non-believers and in relation to experients, fantasy proneness, paranormal beliefs and the personality dimensions of institution and feeling were significantly related, as were psychological absorption, psychological dissociation, and somatoform dissociation.

Copyright American Society of Clinical Hypnosis Apr 2005
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