What the study found: Self-reported trauma was associated with more complex and disturbed Rorschach content, and both self-report and Rorschach data were linked to avoiding emotionally charged stimuli in an eye-tracking task.
Why the authors say this matters: The authors conclude that self-reported trauma may be reflected in behavioral patterns captured by performance-based and eye-tracking measures, offering insight into trauma-related attention and response tendencies.
What the researchers tested: Ninety-three Italian volunteers completed the International Trauma Exposure Measure (ITEM), the Rorschach Performance Assessment System (R-PAS), and a free-viewing eye-tracking task that contrasted neutral and negative stimuli. The researchers examined correlations among ITEM scores, selected R-PAS variables, and dwell time, which they used as an attentional bias index.
What worked and what didn't: Self-reported trauma was associated with more complex and disturbed Rorschach content. More importantly, both self-report and Rorschach data correlated with a tendency to avoid emotionally charged stimuli in the eye-tracking task.
What to keep in mind: The abstract describes a sample of 93 Italian volunteers, so the findings are limited to that group. It also does not report other limitations in the available summary.
Key points
- Self-reported trauma was linked to more complex and disturbed Rorschach content.
- Self-report and Rorschach data both correlated with avoiding emotionally charged stimuli.
- The study used ITEM, R-PAS, and a free-viewing eye-tracking task with neutral and negative stimuli.
- The sample consisted of 93 Italian volunteers.
- The abstract says the findings may offer insight into trauma-related attention and response tendencies.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Trauma linked to disturbed Rorschach content and avoidant attention
- Publication date:
- 2026-03-30
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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