Volume 28, Issue. 3, June, 2012


Personality correlates of reporting Chinese words from the Deutsch

 You Xu*, Junpeng Zhu*, Wanzhen Chen, Hao Chai, Wei He, Wei Wang  


Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou 310058, China

Abstract 

Objective
When English-speaking people listen to the Deutsch "high-low" word illusion, they report hearing English words. Whether Chinese-speaking people report Chinese words when listening to the illusion, or whether any reported words might be correlated with personality traits as previous investigations have demonstrated for listening to music in other cultures, is open to question. The present study aimed to address this. 
Methods
A total of 308 right-handed, healthy volunteers (177 women and 131 men) were given the illusion test and asked to answer the Zuckerman-Kuhlman personality questionnaire (ZKPQ). Their depressive tendency was measured by the Plutchik-van Praag depression inventory (PVP). 
Results
There was no gender effect regarding either the PVP score or the number of reported Chinese words from the illusion. Women scored higher on ZKPQ neuroticism-anxiety than men. The number of meaningful Chinese words reported was correlated with the ZKPQ impulsive sensation-seeking, aggression-hostility, and activity scores. Some words reported by participants who scored higher on these three traits were related in meaning to those scales. 
Conclusion
Our preliminary results suggest that when Chinese-speaking people listen to the Deutsch "high-low" word illusion, they might use personality-related, specific cognitive schemata.

Keywords

Chinese words; Deutsch 

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