A study of personality: A Western and Soviet point of view

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John Hritzuk
Cite this article:  Hritzuk, J. (1973). A study of personality: A Western and Soviet point of view. Social Behavior and Personality: An international journal, 1(1), 58-63.


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A theoretical and experimental comparison is made of Eysenck’s and Norakidze’s work. The Soviet interpretation of set is a state of the participant in which prior events or activity conditions an individual to perceive stimuli or to react to stimuli in a specific manner. For Western psychologists, set has varied meanings. Experimentally, hysterics and dysthymics significantly differ in set trials on Uznadze set tasks; however, the neurotics and non-neurotics, extraverts and introverts do not differ on set tasks.

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© 1973 Scientific Journal Publishers Limited. All Rights Reserved.