Abstract

Dr. A. Stanley Webster is author of articles in periodical literature on psychological problems in children, and of a monograph on the development of phobias in women. He is Chief Clinical Psychologist in the Eastern State Hospital, Knoxville, Tennessee, and Assistant Professor of Psychology in the University of Tennessee. In the present article he indicates that personality characteristics in a prison population are decidedly instable and quite unlike those in the normal population. Usual methods of treatment, therefore, are valueless in the prison.-EDITOR.

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