الإسهام النسبي لأنماط الاستثارة الفائقة في التنبؤ ببعض الأعراض المرضية لدى الطلبة الموهوبين والعاديين بجامعة الملك سعود
The study aims to determine whether overexcitabilities can predict pathological symptoms of some mental disorders (somatization, obsessive-compulsive disorder, depression, anxiety, and psychosis) among gifted and non-gifted students. In addition to Identifying the differences in overexcitabilities among male and female students, gifted and non-gifted students at King Saud University. In order to achieve the study objectives, the overexcitabilities questionnaire-two (OEQ-2) developed by Falk, Lind, Miller, Piechowski, and Silverman (1999) and the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL90-R) developed by Derogatis (1994) were conducted on a sample consisting of 586 students at King Saud University, 325 gifted students, and 261 ordinary students. 240 Male and 346 female students in King Saud University's class of 1442AH. Results show that overexcitabilities have effectively contributed to predicting pathological symptoms (somatization, obsessive compulsive disorder, depression, anxiety, and psychosis). It also shows no statistically significant differences between gifted and ordinary students in all Overexcitabilities except intellectual overexcitability in favor of gifted students. In addition, there were statistically significant differences between male and female students in psychomotor overexcitability in favor of male students, and there were statistically significant differences in emotional and sensual overexcitabilities in favor of female students, while there were no statistically significant differences between male and female students in imaginational and intellectual overexcitabilities and overall overexcitabilities. (Published abstract)