I will write this up for my university dissertation and might also present the research at academic conferences or write it up for publication in an academic journal. I will also look at the way the language we both use shapes my understanding of what you tell me. Then I will look at the information from all the interviews and try to find common themes or points of difference in people’s experiences which seem particularly important. I will transcribe (write down) the interview and if you would like to, you can then read a copy of the transcript and approve it before I start analysis. What will happen to the information from the interview? But there’s no easy way to describe the whole range of experiences people have in neat bullet points, so the criteria are flexible. If you’re not sure whether you fit this description, you’re very welcome to get in touch and we can talk about it - the criteria are designed to describe people whose experiences of voice hearing and of bilingualism or multilingualism are significant to them, who will be able to remember those experiences clearly enough to talk to me about them. If this describes you, I would like to interview you about the languages you speak and the languages your voices speak, and how your languages affect your relationship with your voices. Have heard voices in the last year & have heard them more than once. I am hoping to speak to 10-15 people, by phone or online, who:Īre over 16 years old, live in the UK and would be comfortable being interviewed in English Īnd/or hear voices in a language which is not their first language Īnd/or hear voices and are a migrant to the UK from a non-English-speaking country I am interviewing people who hear voices others do not hear (sometimes called auditory-verbal hallucinations) who also speak more than one language, for my dissertation study.
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