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. 2012 Feb 17;7(2):e30800. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030800

Table 1. Descriptive statistics of subjects (n = 261).

Characteristics Valuesa Missings
Age 27.8Inline graphic6.0 0%
Body mass index 22.2Inline graphic2.3 25%
Gender 0%
male 62% (161)
female 38% (100)
Education 0%
High school diploma 9% (23)
University students 56% (147)
University graduates 35% (91)
Hallucinogen-naïve 15%
yesb 59% (131)
no 41% (90)
Daily smoker 24%
yes 30% (59)
no 70% (139)
THC use 16%
never 16% (35)
rarelyc 50% (109)
sometimesd 35% (76)
Alcohol consumption 23%
< = 60 ml per month 55% (110)
>60 ml per month 45% (90)
ZKPQ
Impulsive Sensation Seekinge 0.4Inline graphic0.8 52%
Neuroticism-Anxietye −0.9Inline graphic0.7 52%
Aggression-Hostilitye −0.6Inline graphic0.9 52%
Activitye 0.0Inline graphic0.9 52%
Sociabilitye −0.1Inline graphic0.9 52%
TAS
Absorptionf −0.8Inline graphic1.2 72%
SCL-90-R
Global Severity Indexg −0.3Inline graphic0.9 31%

Note. THC = Tetrahydrocannabinol; ZKPQ = Zuckerman-Kuhlman Personality Questionnaire; TAS = Tellegen Absorption Scale; SCL-90-R = Symptom Check-List-90-Revised.

a

Means Inline graphic standard deviations and frequencies are shown for continuous and categorical variables, respectively. Numbers in parenthesis indicate absolute frequencies.

b

Experience of a classical hallucinogen at least once in a lifetime previous to the first experimental day.

c

Less than once per month.

d

1–10 times per month.

e

Normed on the Bielefeld-Jena sample (n = 141) of Angleitner et al. [33].

f

Normed on the sample of Ritz et al. [36].

g

Normed on a German community sample (n = 1006) [40].