IDENTIFICATION OF THE PHENOMENON OF COGNITIVE POLYPHASIA ABOUT MENTAL ILLNESS USING THE PROJECTIVE TECHNIQUE «BUBBLES»
Abstract and keywords
Abstract (English):
The article discusses the results of the application of the projective technique "Bubbles" in the study of social representations of mental illness. The purpose of the study: to identify multidirectional social perceptions of mental illness. Research hypothesis: respondents' social perceptions of mental illness are characterized by duality. The sample consisted of Muslims – N = 111 (men – 53, women – 58 people) and Orthodox Christians – N = 114 (men – 49 people, women – 65 people), non–believers – N=113 (men – 76 people, women - 37 people), aged 18-23, 40-45, 60-65 years old, living in Moscow. Used: the author's questionnaire, which included 29 statements, the "Bubbles" technique. It was found that in both groups of respondents, the core of the JV about the mentally ill contains elements that demonstrate a positive orientation. The use of the "Bubbles" projective technique revealed the predominant negative nature of the perception of mentally ill people in three groups of respondents (the least negative perception in the group of respondents of Muslims (p<0.07). Respondents of the studied groups aged 18-23 years demonstrate the most positive representation of a mentally ill person than respondents aged 60-65 years (p<0.08). Thus, the results obtained with the help of a quantitative survey are in contradiction with the results of the qualitative method, thereby revealing the coexistence of SPS of different content, and therefore, allowing us to assert the phenomenon of cognitive polyphasia.

Keywords:
social representations, cognitive polyphasia, mental illness, mentally ill, projective method, «Bubbles»
References

1. Emel'yanova T.P. Social'nye predstavleniya: Istoriya, teoriya i empiricheskie issledovaniya. - M.: Izd-vo «Institut psihologii RAN», 2016. - 476s. (Psihologiya social'nyh yavleniy).

2. Emel'yanova T.P., Israelyan T.V. Obraz psihicheski bol'nogo v massovoy kul'ture // Duhovno-nravstvennye problemy sovremennoy lichnosti / otv.red. M.I. Volovikova, A.L. Zhuravlev, A.V. Yurevich. M.: Izd-vo «Institut psihologii RAN». 2018, S. 404-415.

3. Emel'yanova T.P., Israelyan T.V. Fenomen kognitivnoy polifazii v social'nyh predstavleniyah o dushevnobol'nyh // Vestnik RUDN. Seriya: Psihologiya i pedagogika. 2021. Tom. 18. № 2. S. 346-362. doihttps://doi.org/10.22363/2313-1683-2021-18-2-346-362

4. Berger J. Distance and drawing. In: Berger J. and Savage J. (eds) // Berger on Drawing. Aghabullogue: Occasional Press. 2007, P. 105-118.

5. De Rosa A.M. The social representations of mental illness in children and adults. In: Doise W. and Moscovici S. (eds) // Current Issues in European Social Psychology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1987, vol. 2, R. 47-138.

6. De Rosa A.M., Farr R. Icon and symbol: two sides of the coin in the investigation of social representations. In: Buschini F. and Kalampalikis N. (eds)// Penser la vie, le social, la nature. Melanges en l honneur de Serge Moscovici. Paris: Les Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l’Homme. 2001, R. 237-256.

7. De Rosa A.M. The role of the iconic-imaginary dimensions in the modelling approach to social representations // Papers on Social Representations. 2014, vol. 23, R. 17.1-17.26.

8. Gameiro S., de Guevara B.B., El Refaie E., et al. Drawing Out - An innovative drawing workshop method to support the generation and dissemination of research findings // Plos One. 2018, vol. 13, no.9, P. e0203197. doi:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203197

9. Gunay M. Design in Visual Communication // Art and Design Review. 2021, vol. 9, P. 109-122. doi.org/10.4236/adr.2021.92010

10. Hakokongas E., Sakki I. The Naturalized Nation: Anchoring, Objectification and Naturalized Social Representations of History // Journal of Social and Political Psychology. 2016, vol. 4, no. 2, R. 646-669.

11. Jovchelovitch S. Rehabilitation of common sense: social representations, science and cognitive polyphasia // Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour. 2008, vol. 38, no. 4, P. 431-448.

12. Kim Y. #Nomask on Instagram: Exploring Visual Representations of the Antisocial Norm on Social Media // International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022, vol. 19, no.11. doi:https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19116857.

13. Kress G., van Leeuwen T. «Reading Images: The Grammar of Visual Design». by Routledge, N-Y. 1996, 321 p.

14. Lyon P. Using drawing in visual research: materializing the invisible. In: Pauwels L. and Mannay D. (eds) // The Sage Handbook of Visual Research Methods. London: Sage. 2020, R. 297-308.

15. Markova I. Dialogicality and Social Representations. The Dynamics of Mind. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.

16. Martikainen J. A Good Leader Based on Graduating Students' Drawings: A Social Representations Approach // PEOPLE: International Journal of Social Sciences. 2018, vol. 4, no. 3, P. 57-75. doi:https://doi.org/10.20319/pijss.2018.43.5775

17. Martikainen J. Social representations of teachership based on students and teachers drawings of a typical teacher // Social Psychology of Education. 2019, vol. 22, no. 3, P. 579-606.

18. Martikainen J. Visual Representations of Teachership - A Social Representation Approach. Doctoral Dissertation. Finland: University of Eastern Finland, 2020.

19. Milgram S., Jodelet D. Psychological maps of Paris. In: Proshansky H., Ittelson W.H., Rivlin L.G. (eds) // Environmental Psychology: People and Their Physical Settings. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. 1976, R. 104-124.

20. Moscovici S. The phenomenon of social representations. In: Farr R. and Moscovici S. (eds) // Social Representations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984. R. 3-69.

21. Moscovici S. Social representations and pragmatic communication // Social Science Information, 1994. vol. 33, no. 2, R.163-177.

22. Moscovici S. The history and actuality of social representation. In: Flick U. (ed) // The Psychology of The Social. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. R. 209-247.

23. Moscovici S. Psychoanalysis: its image and its public. Edited by G. Duveen, trans. D. Macey. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2008.

24. Phoenix A.A., Howarth C., Philogene G. The everyday politics of identities and social representations: a critical approach // Papers on Social Representations. 2017, vol. 26, no. 1, P. 2.1-2.21

25. Sakki I., Menard R., Pirttila-Backman A-M. Sosiaaliset representaatiot. Yhteis «on ja mielen» valinen silta . In: Gronow A. and Kaidesoja T. (eds) // Ihmismielen Sosiaalisuus. Helsinki: Gaudeamus. 2017, R. 104-129.

26. Sarrica M. Brondi S. Photovoice as a visual-verbal strategy for studying contents and processes of social representations: a participatory project on sustainable energy // Qualitative Research in Psychology. 2020, vol. 17, no.4, P. 565-586.

Login or Create
* Forgot password?