A Comparison of Anxiety Levels of Partially Sighted and Totally Blind Adults Page: 2
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Zeagler, Arnold M., A Comparison of Anxiety Levels of
Partially Sighted and Totally Blind Adults. Master of Science
(Clinical Psychology), August, 1975, 29 pp., 2 tables, 4
appendixes, bibliography, 7 titles.
Anxiety levels of partially sighted were compared with
totally blind people. Using the Anxiety Scale for the Blind,
the primary hypothesis tested was that the partially sighted
would manifest more anxiety than would the totally blind.
The study was designed to ascertain whether the primary
hypothesis would hold within the structure of this study, and
to obtain information useful in future anxiety studies of
the visually handicapped.
A residential center for the blind furnished subjects,
facilities, and biographical data.
The primary hypothesis lacked statistical significance
at the .05 level as did comparisons of anxiety levels by age,
sex, economic need, and age at onset. The use of a different
instrument may be indicated for future studies.
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Zeagler, Arnold M. A Comparison of Anxiety Levels of Partially Sighted and Totally Blind Adults, thesis, August 1975; Denton, Texas. (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc663471/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; .