Bernini, M. and Alderson-Day, B. and Fernyhough, C. (2017) 'Uncharted features and dynamics of reading : voices, characters, and crossing of experiences.', Consciousness and cognition., 49 . pp. 98-109.
Abstract
Readers often describe vivid experiences of voices and characters in a manner that has been likened to hallucination. Little is known, however, of how common such experiences are, nor the individual differences they may reflect. Here we present the results of a 2014 survey conducted in collaboration with a national UK newspaper and an international book festival. Participants (n = 1566) completed measures of reading imagery, inner speech, and hallucination-proneness, including 413 participants who provided detailed free-text descriptions of their reading experiences. Hierarchical regression analysis indicated that reading imagery was related to phenomenological characteristics of inner speech and proneness to hallucination-like experiences. However, qualitative analysis of reader’s accounts suggested that vivid reading experiences were marked not just by auditory phenomenology, but also their tendency to cross over into non-reading contexts. This supports social-cognitive accounts of reading while highlighting a role for involuntary and uncontrolled personality models in the experience of fictional characters.
Item Type: | Article |
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Full text: | (AM) Accepted Manuscript Available under License - Creative Commons Attribution. Download PDF (593Kb) |
Full text: | (VoR) Version of Record Available under License - Creative Commons Attribution. Download PDF (324Kb) |
Status: | Peer-reviewed |
Publisher Web site: | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2017.01.003 |
Publisher statement: | © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
Date accepted: | 22 January 2017 |
Date deposited: | 01 February 2017 |
Date of first online publication: | 03 February 2017 |
Date first made open access: | No date available |
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