Performing artists who were exposed to abuse, neglect or a dysfunctional family as a child might experience their creative process more intensely, according to a new long-term study that has found a link between the two.
一项长期研究发现,表演艺术家的创造力和童年经历存在联系——童年不幸者(如被虐待、被忽视、家庭不和睦)更富创造力。
Psychologists at California State University, Northridge, studied 234 professional performers, looking for a reason why mental health disorders are so common in the performing arts.
美国加州州立大学北岭分校的心理学家调查了234名专业表演家,寻找表演艺术家心理健康问题频发的原因。
"The notion that artists and performing artists suffered more pathology, including bipolar disorder, troubled us," psychologist Paula Thomson, a co-author on the new study, told Psypost.
这项新研究的作者之一、心理学家宝拉·汤姆森告诉Psypost网站说:“艺术家和表演家更容易患上躁郁症等心理疾病,这让我们感到困扰。”
The study examined 83 actors, directors, and designers; 129 dancers; and 20 musicians and opera singers. These study participants filled out self-report surveys pertaining to childhood adversity, sense of shame, creative experiences, proneness to fantasies, anxiety, and level of engagement in an activity.
【研究发现:童年不幸者更富创造力】相关文章:
最新
2019-01-07
2019-01-07
2019-01-07
2019-01-07
2019-01-07
2019-01-05