“…Examining the 29 ego constriction references, a slightly different picture emerges. Twenty-two articles (Berg and Berg, 1983;Bernabeu, 1958;Blum, 1968;Curran and Marengo, 1990;Dor-Shav, 1978;Kepecs and Robin, 1956;Leenars, 1999Leenars, , 1997Leenars, , 1991Leenars, , 1990Leenars, , 1989aLeenars, , 1989bLeenars and Lester, 1990;Leenars, De Wilde, Wenckstern, and Kral, 2001;Motanky and Zaks, 1971;Polansky, Boone, DeSaix, and Sharlin, 1971;Puyser, 1977;Ratna and Murthy, 1970;Shows, Gentry, and Wyrick, 1974;Sudak, Corradi, Martin, and Gold, 1984;Wells, 1988;Wyrick, Gentry, and Shows, 1977) used ego constriction in a descriptive and general sense. Of these, the eight papers by Leenar and colleagues (see references above) used ego constriction as synonymous with general cognitive constriction; and similarly Polansky et al (1971) used ego constriction to mean intellectual constriction.…”