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Article
Published Online: February 1966

THE ROLE OF INPUT RELEVANCE IN SENSORY ISOLATION

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

This investigation was designed to subject to systematic study the hypothesis that the effects of sensory isolation are due to the removal of meaningful information relevant to the solution of an internally perceived problem. Three experimental conditions were used in which auditory input was the only experimental variable not held constant. The three varieties of auditory input were: 1) white noise (no meaning); 2) recordings of playlets, puzzles, jokes, etc. (meaning present); and 3) tape recordings played backward (no meaning).
The paper reports comparative effects produced in ten subjects in each condition as obtained from subjects' reports and psychological tests. The results suggest that heightened imagery seen in sensory isolation is related to depatterning of input, but that disturbances of concentration, sleep-wake confusion, emotional lability, impairment of reality testing, errors of visual retention and certain other cognitive and perceptual impairments seen are related to the absence of meaningful input.

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Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 920 - 928
PubMed: 5902505

History

Published in print: February 1966
Published online: 1 April 2006

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Director, Department of Psychiatry, Sinai Hospital of Detroit, 6767 West Outer Drive, Detroit, Mich.
Chief Psychologist, Department of Psychiatry, Sinai Hospital of Detroit, 6767 West Outer Drive, Detroit, Mich.

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