Peritraumatic dissociation revisited: associations with autonomic activation, facial movements, staring, and intrusion formation.
Sarah K DanböckJulina A RattelLaila K FrankeMichael LiedlgruberStephan F MiedlFrank H WilhelmPublished in: European journal of psychotraumatology (2021)
Our results suggest that, at low-dissociation-levels observed in trauma-analogue studies, peritraumatic dissociation may occur together with heightened autonomic arousal and facial movements, indexing increased negative affect. Staring might, irrespectively of dissociation-levels, serve as objective marker for dissociation. Together, peritraumatic dissociation and its psychophysiological correlates might set the stage for later intrusion formation.