Group Hysteria and the MMPI

Abstract
Following a labeled case of a group conversion reaction, the authors attempted to re-investigate the plausibility of an hysterical personality. 96 students, including those who manifested the symptoms, were administered 100 items from the MMPI, including the Hysteria scale (No. 3). Chi square analysis showed significactly more females manifested hysterical physical symptoms than males, while the over-all analysis of variance, although in the expected direction for females, indicated no significant sources. Results supported the traditional view of hysteria being a “female syndrome” but were equivocal concerning “personality view” that a particular personality leads to a specific set of symptoms.

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