Measuring the Suicidal Mind
Harvard University · Massachusetts General Hospital
Abstract
Suicide is difficult to predict and prevent because people who consider killing themselves often are unwilling or unable to report their intentions. Advances in the measurement of implicit cognition provide an opportunity to test whether automatic associations of self with death can provide a behavioral marker for suicide risk. We measured implicit associations about death/suicide in 157 people seeking treatment at a psychiatric emergency department. Results confirmed that people who have attempted suicide hold a significantly stronger implicit association between death/suicide and self than do psychiatrically distressed individuals who have not attempted suicide. Moreover, the implicit association of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Suicide prevention
- Association (psychology)
- Depression (economics)
- Cognition
- Injury prevention
- Poison control
- Clinical psychology
- Good health and well-being