- The relationship between misophonia, stress, and traumatic stress has not been well characterized scientifically. This study aimed to explore the relationships among misophonia, stress, lifetime traumatic events, and traumatic stress. A community sample of adults with self-reported misophonia (N = 143) completed structured diagnostic interviews and psychometrically validated self-report measures. Significant positive correlations were observed among perceived stress, traumatic stress, and misophonia severity. However, multivariate analyses revealed that perceived stress significantly predicted misophonia severity, over and above traumatic stress symptoms. The number of adverse life events was not associated with misophonia severity. Among symptom clusters of post-traumatic stress disorder, only hyperarousal was associated with misophonia severity. ... [Read More]
- Total Size
- 2 files (1.55 MB)
- Data Citation
- Rosenthal, M. Z. (2024). Data from: Relationships among stress, perceived stress, trauma, PTSD, and misophonia. Duke Research Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7924/r4mp57d4n
- Creator
- DOI
- 10.7924/r4mp57d4n
- Publication Date
- January 24, 2024
- ARK
- ark:/87924/r4mp57d4n
- Affiliation
- Publisher
- Type
- Related Materials
- Contact
- M. Zachary Rosenthal, mark.rosenthal@duke.edu
- Title
- Data from: Relationships among stress, perceived stress, trauma, PTSD, and misophonia
- Repository
Thumbnail | Title | Date Uploaded | Visibility | Actions |
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Stress_Trauma_Misophonia_codebook.pdf | 2024-01-24 | Download | ||
Stress_trauma_misophonia_dataset_repository.csv | 2024-01-24 | Download |
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