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Adults with Intellectual Disabilities with And without Anxiety Disorder: The Zeigarnik Effect Paradigm Revisited
2016
Multilingual Academic Journal of Education and Social Sciences
Zeigarnik effect refers to the phenomenon whereby "people will recall interrupted tasks much better than completed ones." The present study explored the relationship between Zeigarnik effect and anxiety disorder in 44 young adults with intellectual disabilities. The participants were segregated into "anxious" and "non-anxious" groups. The Glasgow Anxiety Scale for people with an Intellectual Disability (Mindham & Espie, 2003) and a series of 20 brief tasks (similar to the concept of Zeigarnik's
doi:10.6007/majess/v4-i1/2044
fatcat:odcqzjvvvfby7kshu7fljwdplm