People expect experiences of dissociation to be negative—But do not tend to remember them that way.
Andrea Taylor, Monique Woolerton, Steven J. Lynn, Rachel Zajac, Maryanne Garry
Psychology of Consciousness Theory Research and Practice June 4, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1037/cns0000477 via OpenAlex
Summary
In a study involving 1,482 participants, people recalled their past dissociative experiences as predominantly neutral and more often positive than negative. This trend was consistent even among those with psychopathology or significant dissociation. When considering future dissociative experiences, individuals expected novel experiences to be more negative compared to familiar ones. Overall, the findings indicate that people may rely less on past dissociative experiences when predicting future occurrences.
Study at a glance
| Design | experiments |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 1,482 |
| Population | people reflecting on their dissociative experiences |
| Key finding | Participants remembered past dissociative experiences as mostly neutral and positive, while expecting novel future experiences to be more negative. |
Abstract
How do people appraise their past and imagined future experiences of dissociation?Over three experiments, 1,482 people brought to mind experiences of dissociation and rated how negative, positive, and neutral those experiences were when they happened or would be in the future.People remembered their past dissociative experiences as most often neutral, and more often positive than negative.This pattern persisted among a subset of experiences associated with psychopathology and a subset of people who dissociate to levels that might be clinically interesting.When people were asked about their future experiences, their expectations depended on whether they had experienced that type of dissociation before-novel experiences were rated as more likely to be negative (and less likely positive or neutral) than familiar experiences.These findings further our understanding of dissociative experiences and suggest that-relative to other experiencespeople might draw less on past experiences of dissociation to predict future ones.