Data for: Self-reported and experimentally induced self-disgust is heightened in Parkinson’s disease: Contribution of behavioural symptoms [to be published in PLoS One] Paul Overton Ana Vivas Marianna Tsatali 10.15131/shef.data.9924485.v1 https://orda.shef.ac.uk/articles/dataset/Data_for_Self-reported_and_experimentally_induced_self-disgust_is_heightened_in_Parkinson_s_disease_Contribution_of_behavioural_symptoms_to_be_published_in_PLoS_One_/9924485 <div>A speadsheet of data from two groups, a Parkinson's disease group and a group of controls matched for age, gender and years in education. Both groups completed questionnaire measures (HADS, QUIP-RS, TOSCA, BIS-11, Self-Disgust Scale), and responded to questions about how they felt following two induction paradigms. In the first paradigm, they were shown photographs of themselves (or a neutral photograph) and were asked to report levels of self-disgust, anger, sadness and the levels of arousal. In the second paradigm, they were asked to narrate instances when they had felt self-disgust, shame, guilt or a neutral mood, and report how they felt after the narration (in terms of the target emotion, anger, sadness, happiness, and the level of arousal).</div><div><br></div><div>Ethical permission was granted for the work by by the University Research Ethics Committee (although there is no reference number for the approval).<br></div> 2019-10-02 14:46:28 Parkinson's Disease Disgust Applied Psychology Health, Clinical and Counselling Psychology Mental Health