1958
DOI: 10.1037/h0045425
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Social psychological correlates of mental illness and mental health.

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Cited by 26 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The differences are either evidence for the existence of such a class of relationships or the result of serious methodological errors. Differences obtained between groups of mothers in most studies cannot be attributed conclusively to the psychopathological differences between the schizophrenic and normal groups since other nonschizophrenic differences related to hospitalization and failure in life may be operating (Scott, 1958). This is especially true for obtained differences between two groups of mothers' responses to retrospective questionnaires, where the mother of a schizophrenic's guilt, shame, or feeling of failure may lead to important response biases and even deliberate falsifications.…”
Section: University Of Floridamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The differences are either evidence for the existence of such a class of relationships or the result of serious methodological errors. Differences obtained between groups of mothers in most studies cannot be attributed conclusively to the psychopathological differences between the schizophrenic and normal groups since other nonschizophrenic differences related to hospitalization and failure in life may be operating (Scott, 1958). This is especially true for obtained differences between two groups of mothers' responses to retrospective questionnaires, where the mother of a schizophrenic's guilt, shame, or feeling of failure may lead to important response biases and even deliberate falsifications.…”
Section: University Of Floridamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…At the end of 1990, Baloglu and McCleary [24] began to divide images into cognitive and emotional images. In their research, a cognitive image refers to a sensory perception that an individual has from objective and factual information about an object, while an emotional image refers to the value aspect of how positive an image an individual thinks an object has [25]. By applying their claims about these images to the concept of tourism destination image, a cognitive image refers to an individual's perceptual evaluation of a tourism destination, while an emotional image refers to the subjective feelings or emotions formed through the tourist's accumulated experience in relation to the tourism destination [26].…”
Section: Emotional Imagementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The concept of the destination image is subjective (Woosnam et al, 2020) and includes an individual's feelings, impressions, ideas, and beliefs (Crompton, 1979;Pike, 2017). The concept of destination image was introduced by Gartner (1994), Scott (1965), andSolo (1956) as three interrelated yet distinct components of conative, affective and cognitive image. This provided the methodological and conceptual means of examining destination image (Chew & Jahari, 2014;Sharma et al, 2022b).…”
Section: Literature Review and Hypotheses Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%