4,716 results on '"SCHIZOTYPY"'
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52. Can you believe your eyes? Positive schizotypy is associated with increased susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer illusion.
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Lányi, Orsolya, Kéri, Szabolcs, Pálffy, Zsófia, and Polner, Bertalan
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SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *OPTICAL illusions , *CONVENIENCE sampling (Statistics) , *MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *DELUSIONS - Abstract
Visual illusions provide a unique opportunity to understand cognitive and perceptual alterations in schizophrenia-spectrum conditions. Schizophrenia patients often exhibit increased susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer illusion. Here, we investigate susceptibility to the Müller-Lyer visual illusion in the general population with different levels of schizotypy. We assessed a population-based convenience sample (N = 263) on an online platform. In addition to basic demographics, participants completed the Müller-Lyer illusion, the Cardiff Anomalous Perceptions Scale (CAPS) to measure perceptual anomalies, and the Multidimensional Schizotypy Scale – Brief (MSS-B) for schizotypic traits. To evaluate what predicts susceptibility to the illusion, we fitted a large set of multilevel logistic regression models and performed model averaging over the coefficients. We found support for increased illusion susceptibility among individuals with high positive schizotypy. However, we did not find a comparable effect for anomalous perceptions alone, or for negative or disorganized schizotypy. The increased Müller-Lyer effect in positive schizotypy might be specific to delusion-like beliefs and magical ideation. Further research is needed to clarify how a hierarchical Bayesian formulation of brain function (e.g. imbalances between bottom-up perceptual processing and substantial reliance on prior expectations) can account for the Müller-Lyer effect in schizophrenia-spectrum conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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53. Humiliation and state anxiety as predictors of attenuated psychosis in a community sample.
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Toh, Wei Lin, Lee, Stuart J., Rancie, Tim, Penita, Phaybian, Moseley, Peter, and Rossell, Susan L.
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HUMILIATION ,ANXIETY ,PSYCHOSES - Abstract
Existing literature suggests that humiliation experiences, coupled with a negative family context, significantly predicts persecutory ideation in non-clinical participants. Whether this may also be linked to attenuated psychotic experiences is unknown. The current study aimed to assess whether familial adversity and humiliation may be related to hallucination-like experiences (HLEs) and other psychotic symptoms, and if state anxiety significantly contributed to these relationships. This cross-sectional study recruited a community sample of 93 adults (38% male; mean age = 27.3 years, standard deviation = 10.8 years), who completed measures of maladaptive familial environments, past and anticipated humiliation experiences, state anxiety and attenuated psychotic symptoms. Correlations and hierarchical regressions tested for direct and indirect relationships amongst study variables. A maladaptive family context, and humiliation (past and anticipated) were positively correlated with HLEs, and facets of attenuated psychotic symptoms. Anxiety uniquely predicted audio-visual and multisensory HLEs. Past humiliation and anxiety jointly predicted cognitive-perceptual disturbance and disorganisation, whereas fear of humiliation and anxiety jointly predicted interpersonal difficulty. Elevated state anxiety, coupled with humiliation, may increase attenuated psychotic symptoms in adulthood. Future research is needed to ascertain if these relationships hold true in clinical cohorts to examine the clinical significance of these data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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54. Hallucination-Proneness is Associated With a Decrease in Robust Averaging of Perceptual Evidence.
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Larsen, Emmett M, Jin, Jingwen, Zhang, Xian, Donaldson, Kayla R, Liew, Megan, Horga, Guillermo, Luhmann, Christian, and Mohanty, Aprajita
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HALLUCINATIONS ,COMPUTER simulation ,PSYCHOSES ,COLOR vision ,TASK performance ,SENSORY stimulation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DECISION making ,ODDS ratio ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background and Hypothesis Hallucinations are characterized by disturbances in perceptual decision-making about environmental stimuli. When integrating across multiple stimuli to form a perceptual decision, typical observers engage in "robust averaging" by down-weighting extreme perceptual evidence, akin to a statistician excluding outlying data. Furthermore, observers adapt to contexts with more unreliable evidence by increasing this down-weighting strategy. Here, we test the hypothesis that hallucination-prone individuals (n = 38 high vs n = 91 low) would show a decrease in this robust averaging and diminished sensitivity to changes in evidence variance. Study Design We used a multielement perceptual averaging task to elicit dichotomous judgments about the "average color" (red/blue) of an array of stimuli in trials with varied strength (mean) and reliability (variance) of decision-relevant perceptual evidence. We fitted computational models to task behavior, with a focus on a log-posterior-ratio (LPR) model which integrates evidence as a function of the log odds of each perceptual option and produces a robust averaging effect. Study Results Hallucination-prone individuals demonstrated less robust averaging, seeming to weigh inlying and outlying extreme or untrustworthy evidence more equally. Furthermore, the model that integrated evidence as a function of the LPR of the two perceptual options and produced robust averaging showed poorer fit for the group prone to hallucinations. Finally, the weighting strategy in hallucination-prone individuals remained insensitive to evidence variance. Conclusions Our findings provide empirical support for theoretical proposals regarding evidence integration aberrations in psychosis and alterations in the perceptual systems that track statistical regularities in environmental stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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55. I don’t understand how I feel: mediating role of impaired self-mentalizing in the relationship between childhood adversity and psychosis spectrum experiences.
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Nonweiler, Jacqueline, Torrecilla, Pilar, Kwapil, Thomas R., Ballespí, Sergi, and Barrantes-Vidal, Neus
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PARANOIA ,PSYCHOSES ,YOUNG adults ,SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder - Abstract
Introduction: Childhood adversity is associated with the severity of multiple dimensions of psychosis, but the mechanisms underpinning the close link between the two constructs is unclear. Mentalization may underlie this relationship, as impaired mentalizing is found in various stages of the psychosis continuum. Nonetheless, the differential roles of self- and other-mentalizing in psychosis are not well understood. Methods: Parallel multiple mediation was conducted for the relationship between a diverse range of childhood adversity types, including intentional and nonintentional harm, and schizotypy (positive, negative, disorganized), psychotic-like experiences (PLE) and paranoia via self-mentalizing (attention to emotions and emotional clarity) and other-mentalizing in n =  1,156 nonclinically ascertained young adults. Results: Significant parallel multiple mediation models were found for all psychotic outcomes except negative schizotypy. The associations between intentionally harmful childhood adversity and psychotic outcomes were significantly mediated by increased attention to emotions for most models and decreased emotional clarity for some models. No significant mediation was found for parental loss. Paternal abuse was only mediated by attention to emotions whereas the effects of maternal abuse were mediated by attention to emotions and emotional clarity. Other-mentalizing only showed mediating effects on one of thirty models tested. Conclusion: Results highlight the mediating role of impaired self-mentalizing in the association between childhood adversity and psychosis. This is consistent with disturbances of self-concept and self-boundary characterizing, in particular, the positive dimension of psychosis. Maternal versus paternal figures may contribute differentially to the development of mentalizing. These results could inform future preventative interventions, focusing on the development and maintenance of self-mentalizing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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56. Examining the Schizophrenia-Spectrum Specificity of Measures of Schizotypy.
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Warfford, Noelle A. and Mezo, Peter G.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA risk factors , *SELF-evaluation , *CROSS-sectional method , *SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *RISK assessment , *AUTISM , *MENTAL depression , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder - Abstract
Self-report measures of schizotypy are an important tool for identifying individuals who may be considered at higher risk for developing a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder. Previous research into the specificity of such measures has led to mixed results, such that it is unclear whether individuals who are not at higher risk of psychosis are being incorrectly identified as at-risk based on these measures. Using latent profile analysis (LPA), the current study aimed to analyze what overlap may exist in the response patterns of individuals with schizophrenia symptoms, non-schizophrenia-spectrum disorder symptoms, and non-symptomatic individuals using four common self-report measures of schizotypy. The sample (N = 676) was divided into five groups based on participants' endorsement of symptoms of the following disorders: schizophrenia, autism spectrum disorder, depression, or obsessive-compulsive disorder. Another subset of respondents endorsed no symptoms of clinical severity. The optimal LPA model included four latent profiles: high schizotypy, high negative schizotypy, moderate schizotypy, and low schizotypy. In the high schizotypy profile, there was significant overlap among individuals from the schizophrenia symptom group and the obsessive-compulsive disorder symptom group. This suggests that individuals who are not at risk for developing a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder respond to these measures in a similar way to individuals who already exhibit symptoms of such disorders. Another possible explanation for the results is that schizotypy is more of a transdiagnostic construct than previously believed. Continued research is needed to understand the limitations of the individual measures of schizotypy included in this study and determine which explanation is most appropriate. General Scientific Summary: Multiple self-report questionnaires assess schizotypy, which is a set of characteristics that indicate risk of developing schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. This study suggests that some individuals who are not at risk of developing these disorders respond to such questionnaires similarly to individuals who are at risk, which limits the conclusions that can be drawn in research using those questionnaires. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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57. Schizophrenia polygenic risk score in psychosis proneness.
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Mas-Bermejo, Patricia, Papiol, Sergi, Via, Marc, Rovira, Paula, Torrecilla, Pilar, Kwapil, Thomas R., Barrantes-Vidal, Neus, and Rosa, Araceli
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DISEASE risk factors , *MONOGENIC & polygenic inheritance (Genetics) , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PSYCHOSES , *GENOME-wide association studies , *PATERNAL age effect - Abstract
Schizophrenia (SZ) is a complex disorder with a highly polygenic inheritance. It can be conceived as the extreme expression of a continuum of traits that are present in the general population often broadly referred to as schizotypy. However, it is still poorly understood how these traits overlap genetically with the disorder. We investigated whether polygenic risk for SZ is associated with these disorder-related phenotypes (schizotypy, psychotic-like experiences, and subclinical psychopathology) in a sample of 253 non-clinically identified participants. Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) were constructed based on the latest SZ genome-wide association study using the PRS-CS method. Their association with self-report and interview measures of SZ-related traits was tested. No association with either schizotypy or psychotic-like experiences was found. However, we identified a significant association with the Motor Change subscale of the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States (CAARMS) interview. Our results indicate that the genetic overlap of SZ with schizotypy and psychotic-like experiences is less robust than previously hypothesized. The relationship between high PRS for SZ and motor abnormalities could reflect neurodevelopmental processes associated with psychosis proneness and SZ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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58. Measurement invariance of brief forms of the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire across convenience versus random samples.
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O'Hare, Kirstie J.M. and Linscott, Richard J.
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PERSONALITY questionnaires , *STATISTICAL sampling , *CONVENIENCE sampling (Statistics) , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *HIGH school students - Abstract
Schizotypy, a multifaceted personality construct that represents liability for schizophrenia, is generally measured with self-report questionnaires that have been developed and validated in samples of undergraduate students. Given that understanding schizotypy in non-clinical samples is essential for furthering our understanding of schizophrenia-spectrum psychopathologies, it is critical to test whether non-clinically identified undergraduate and other convenience samples respond to schizotypy scales in the same way as random samples of the general population. Here, 651 undergraduates, 350 MTurk workers, and two randomly selected high school samples (n = 177, n = 551) completed brief versions of the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ-BR or SPQ-BRU). Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis was used to test whether measurement invariance was present across samples. Tests were made for all samples together and for each pair of samples. Results showed that a first-order nine-factor model fit the data well, and this factor structure displayed configural and metric invariance across the four samples. This suggests that schizotypy has the same factor structure, and the SPQ-BR/BRU is measuring the same construct across the different groups. However, when all groups were compared, results indicated a lack of scalar invariance across these samples, suggesting mean comparisons may be inappropriate across different sample types. However, when randomly selected high school students were compared with undergraduate students, scalar invariance was present. This suggests that factors such as culture and form type may be driving invariance, rather than sampling method (convenience vs general population). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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59. The dimensionality of perceptual anomalies and their relationships with bullying victimization among Chinese adolescents: From a network perspective.
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Sun, Xiaoqi and Zhong, Jingyi
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CHINESE people , *BULLYING prevention , *BULLYING , *CRIME victims , *PSYCHOSES - Abstract
Anomalous perceptual experiences in adolescents are common and may predict future psychotic disorders and other psychopathologies. However, the underlying structure and their specific relationships with bullying victimizations, a typical stressor for adolescents, remain unclear. Therefore, the current study aimed to clarify the structure of perceptual anomalies as assessed by the Cardiff Anomalous Perceptions Scale (CAPS) using exploratory graph analysis (EGA), a new factor retention method based on network psychometrics. The second aim was to explore whether specific dimensions of perceptual anomalies are particularly associated with certain forms of bullying victimization. Data from a validated sample of 1199 Chinese adolescents (56.0 % females, age range: 14–20) on perceptual anomalies and bullying victimizations were analyzed using network approaches, including EGA and mixed graphical modeling (mgm). Results showed that each anomalous perception was experienced by 13.8–50.3 % of the participants. EGA identified four dimensions: aberrant bodily perceptions, altered daily experiences, chemosensation (i.e., abnormal gustatory and olfactory experiences), and clinical psychosis (i.e., visual and auditory hallucinatory experiences). Among them, the altered daily experiences dimension possessed the highest centrality. Physical bullying and cyberbullying were directly and positively linked to two of the aberrant bodily experiences. Bootstrap analyses suggest that the results are reliable. The current findings support the existence of multiple contributive factors to perceptual anomalies and underscore the importance of bullying prevention in reducing mental health risks for adolescents, particularly the risk of psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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60. Positive schizotypy and Motor Impulsivity correlate with response aberrations in ventral attention network during inhibitory control.
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Vanova, Martina, Ettinger, Ulrich, Aldridge-Waddon, Luke, Jennings, Ben, Norbury, Ray, and Kumari, Veena
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SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder ,MOTOR ability ,RESPONSE inhibition ,PSYCHOPATHY ,INHIBITION in children - Published
- 2023
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61. Social anxiety and social functioning in psychosis
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Tip, Liesbeth Muriël, Schwannauer, Matthias, and Griffiths, Helen
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Social Anxiety ,Social Functioning ,Psychosis ,Attenuated psychosis ,Schizotypy - Abstract
Background: Both social anxiety and psychosis exist on continua but at the same time harbour many aspects and dimensions. Whereas it is commonly accepted that social anxiety and psychosis are associated, and that both can have a negative effect on social functioning, so far insufficient attention has been paid to the complexity of these concepts and their interrelationships. Methods: This thesis combines information from a literature review with four empirical studies to understand the connections between social anxiety, psychosis, social and occupational functioning and quality of life. A systematic review examines subtypes and dimensions of social anxiety, and relates these to psychosis concepts. Four empirical studies place social anxiety in psychosis in a wider context. A first study compares social interaction anxiety across population samples, identifying differences in answering patterns across these samples. One study uses mediation and moderation analyses relating social anxiety and shame with perceived social exclusion as outcome. Two studies use Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) analyses to understand how social anxiety and other clinical variables and beliefs about illness relate to social defeat, which is hypothesised to predict the outcomes of social and occupational functioning and quality of life. Results: Systematic review: Fifty-three articles provided support for 1) discriminability of social anxiety subtypes in psychosis; 2) significant relationships between social anxiety, social anxiety subtypes, social avoidance, avoidant personality disorder or traits with certain psychosis symptoms; and 3) differences between social anxiety subtypes and avoidant personality disorder in how they relate to psychosis. Study 1: Item Response Theory analyses identified seemingly different responses on social interaction anxiety items (SIAS) across population samples (students [N = 505]; social anxiety patients [N = 201]; patients at-risk for psychosis [N = 288]; psychosis outpatients, [N = 142]). Correlations between the parameter estimates of the samples showed that the underlying patterns in responses might be similar. Study 2: Moderation and mediation analyses were conducted in a psychosis outpatient sample (N = 84) including social interaction anxiety (SIAS) and fear of negative evaluation (FNE), internal shame (PBIQ-R), external shame (OAS) and perceived social exclusion because of mental illness (PBIQ-R). Controlling for gender, the direct relationship between both types of social anxiety and sense of exclusion was significant, as were the mediating pathways for shame beliefs about illness. However, none of the pathways were significant when controlling for external shame. No significant moderating effect was identified for internal shame in the relationship between social anxiety and sense of exclusion. Study 3: SEM analyses showed significant contributions to a latent social defeat variable for social interaction anxiety (SIAS), depression (BDI), "social" beliefs about illness (selected items from the PBIQ-R), and at-risk symptoms (CAARMS) in patients at risk for psychosis (N = 201). Social defeat significantly predicted social functioning (SOFAS). Study 4: SEM analyses in a psychosis outpatient sample (N = 174) confirmed significant roles for social interaction anxiety (SIAS), social observation anxiety (SPS), depression (BDI), anxiety (BAI) and Voices (PSYRATS) in the latent variable social defeat construct, but not for Delusions (PSYRATS). Social defeat significantly predicted perceived quality of life. Discussion: The results support the complexity of the relationship of social anxiety with psychosis and showed significant contributions of social anxiety to sense of exclusion, social defeat and (indirectly) to social functioning and perceived quality of life. There may be variations in social anxiety responses across population samples, though this may not necessarily represent differences in underlying patterns. Throughout the chapters, the results are discussed in light of existing theories and evidence on social ranking and social defeat and the findings are related to current views on social anxiety in psychosis. The results of this thesis suggest a role for affect dysregulation in social outcomes in psychosis and provide future research directions.
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- 2022
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62. A review of psychological interventions in prison populations and exploring Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) as predictors of negative outcomes in 18-25-year-olds
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Redmond, Donna, Hanna, Donncha, Rushe, Teresa, and Toner, Paul
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PTSD ,substance use ,prisoners ,adverse childhood experiences ,schizophrenia ,schizotypy ,trauma ,abuse - Abstract
Two studies were completed. The first was a systematic review and meta-analysis to synthesise available quantitative literature on the effectiveness of psychological interventions for targeting co-occurring PTSD and SUD in prison populations. Four databases (Medline, Scopus, Psych INFO and Web of Science) identified N=530 papers and N=11 were accepted for review. Results highlighted important barriers to consider when undertaking research with prison populations. Considering these barriers, results tentatively suggest that psychological intervention may be useful for reducing PTSD and some aspects of SUD in prison populations. The results and implications are discussed in the context of important limitations. The second study focused on a secondary data analysis of the Northern Ireland Childhood Adversity Study (NICAS), applying the Dimensional Model of Adversity and Psychopathology (DMAP) approach to Adverse Childhood Experiences. Firstly, it was explored whether Childhood Maltreatment, Household Dysfunction and Community Adversity predicted levels of Schizotypy, and, secondly whether these baseline relationships were mediated by Spatial Working memory as a measure of executive function. Hierarchal multiple regression models controlling for demographic variables SES and SEX suggested that the dimension Childhood Maltreatment predicted Schizotypy, and its sub-levels, within our sample (n= 155) of 18-25-year-olds. Our hypothesized mediator, Spatial Working Memory, as a marker of executive function was not related to our adversity dimensions or Schizotypy variables within our sample. Implications and limitations discussed herein.
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- 2022
63. Conceptualizing a less paranoid schizophrenia
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James Long and Rachel Hull
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Schizophrenia ,Schizophrenia spectrum disorders ,Schizotypy ,Schizoid ,Psychosis ,Medical philosophy. Medical ethics ,R723-726 - Abstract
Abstract Schizophrenia stands as one of the most studied and storied disorders in the history of clinical psychology; however, it remains a nexus of conflicting and competing conceptualizations. Patients endure great stigma, poor treatment outcomes, and condemnatory prognosis. Current conceptualizations suffer from unstable categorical borders, heterogeneity in presentation, outcome and etiology, and holes in etiological models. Taken in aggregate, research and clinical experience indicate that the class of psychopathologies oriented toward schizophrenia are best understood as spectra of phenomenological, cognitive, and behavioral modalities. These apparently taxonomic expressions are rooted in normal human personality traits as described in both psychodynamic and Five Factor personality models, and more accurately represent explicable distress reactions to biopsychosocial stress and trauma. Current categorical approaches are internally hampered by axiomatic bias and systemic inertia rooted in the foundational history of psychological inquiry; however, when such axioms are schematically decentralized, convergent cross-disciplinary evidence outlines a more robust explanatory construct. By reconceptualizing these disorders under a dimensional and cybernetic model, the aforementioned issues of instability and inaccuracy may be resolved, while simultaneously opening avenues for both early detection and intervention, as well as for more targeted and effective treatment approaches.
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- 2023
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64. Development of the Thought Disorder Measure for the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology
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Cicero, David C, Jonas, Katherine G, Chmielewski, Michael, Martin, Elizabeth A, Docherty, Anna R, Berzon, Jonathan, Haltigan, John D, Reininghaus, Ulrich, Caspi, Avshalom, Graziolplene, Rachael G, and Kotov, Roman
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Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Serious Mental Illness ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Factor Analysis ,Statistical ,Humans ,Psychopathology ,Schizotypal Personality Disorder ,Self Report ,schizophrenia ,psychosis ,schizotypy ,schizotypal personality ,exploratory factor analysis ,confirmatory factor analysis ,Clinical Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Biological psychology - Abstract
The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology consortium aims to develop a comprehensive self-report measure to assess psychopathology dimensionally. The current research describes the initial conceptualization, development, and item selection for the thought disorder spectrum and related constructs from other spectra. The thought disorder spectrum is defined primarily by the positive and disorganized traits and symptoms of schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. The Thought Disorder Sub-Workgroup identified and defined 16 relevant constructs and wrote 10 to 15 items per each construct. These items were administered, along with detachment and mania items, to undergraduates and people with serious mental illness. Three hundred and sixty-five items across 25 scales were administered. An exploratory factor analysis of the scale scores suggested a two-factor structure corresponding to positive and negative symptoms for two samples. The mania scales loaded with the positive factor, while the detachment scales loaded with the negative factor. Item-level analyses resulted in 19 preliminary scales, including 215 items that cover the range of thought disorder pathology, and will be carried forward for the next phase of data collection/analysis.
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- 2022
65. Insulin Resistance, Temperament and Personality Traits Are Associated with Anhedonia in a Transdiagnostic Sample
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Marcin Siwek, Adrian A. Chrobak, Zbigniew Sołtys, Dominika Dudek, and Anna J. Krupa
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anhedonia ,insulin resistance ,major depression ,affective temperament ,personality ,schizotypy ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Anhedonia constitutes a core symptom of major depressive disorder (MDD) mediating the ultimate goal of MDD treatment: functional remission. Anhedonia is also present in other clinical populations, including patients with chronic pain. Recent data links anhedonia to insulin resistance (IR). Some researchers have underlined a different dimension of anhedonia as a temperament/personality trait. The objective of this post-hoc analysis was to explore the links between anhedonia (main outcome) and (1) IR, (2) temperamental, personality, and schizotypy traits (exposures). The study population included patients with MDD, fibromyalgia, and healthy controls. Participants were split into groups: (1) insulin resistant (IR[+] n = 69, HOMA-IR ≥ 2.1) and (2) insulin sensitive (IR[−] n = 69, HOMA-IR < 2.1). Anhedonia was significantly higher in the IR[+] group than the IR[−] group. IR was a predictor of higher anhedonia levels. IR[+] vs. IR[−] participants showed higher levels of anxiety and lower levels of hyperthymic affective temperaments, as well as conscientiousness and emotional stability personality traits. Depressive, irritable, and anxious temperaments, cognitive disorganization, and introvertive anhedonia positively predicted anhedonia, while hyperthymic temperament, conscientiousness, extraversion, and emotional stability traits negatively predicted anhedonia. IR partially mediated the relationship between depressive temperament and anhedonia. In sum, IR, affective temperaments, and personality traits are predictors of anhedonia.
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- 2024
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66. Social Activity in Schizotypy: Measuring Frequency and Enjoyment of Social Events
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Candice C. DeBats, Danielle B. Abel, Morgan M. Sullivan, Sophia C. Koesterer, Imani S. Linton, Jessica L. Mickens, Madisen T. Russell, Lillian A. Hammer, and Kyle S. Minor
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social functioning ,social activities ,schizotypy ,negative traits ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Improving social functioning deficits—a core characteristic of schizophrenia-spectrum disorders—is often listed by patients as a key recovery goal. Evidence suggests that social deficits also extend to people with schizotypy, a group at heightened risk for psychotic and other psychopathological disorders. One challenge of social functioning research in schizotypy is understanding whether social deficits arise from receiving less pleasure from social activities or from participating less in high-pleasure activities. However, limited information exists on what constitutes highly pleasurable, common social activities. In this study, 357 college students rated the frequency and enjoyment of 38 social activities. Our aims were to categorize activities based on their frequency and enjoyment, and whether these correlated with validated social functioning and schizotypy measures. We found that social activities could be characterized based on their frequency and enjoyment and created a frequency–enjoyment matrix that could be useful for future studies. Activities were correlated with social functioning, generally reaching a small effect size level, with increasing frequency and enjoyment showing associations with greater social functioning. Further, negative and disorganized—but not positive—traits were associated with less engagement and pleasure. Although follow-up studies in community samples are needed, our findings have the potential to help researchers and clinicians better understand which activities participants are more likely to engage in and derive pleasure from. The findings may also illustrate the extent to which social deficits may be due to less engagement or less pleasure from social activities, as well as which aspects of schizophrenia-spectrum disorders are associated with these facets of social functioning.
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- 2024
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67. Mentalization-Based Treatment for Schizotypal Personality
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Ridenour, Jeremy M., Knauss, Daniel P. C., Pozzi, Alice, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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68. Evolutionary Systems Therapy for Schizotypy: An Integrated Look at Attachment, Compassion and Metacognition
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Cheli, Simone, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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69. Linking Personality and Psychopathology: A Mentalization-Based Treatment Framework for the Understanding of Schizotypy-Related Psychopathology
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Salaminios, George, Debbané, Martin, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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70. Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy for Schizotypal Personality Disorder
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Catania, Dario, Dimaggio, Giancarlo, Popolo, Raffaele, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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71. Interpersonal Diagnosis of Schizotypy
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Asan, A. Esin, Pincus, Aaron L., Hopwood, Christopher J., Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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72. Addressing Schizotypy in Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy
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Wiesepape, Courtney N., Morris, Madyson, Hasson-Ohayon, Ilanit, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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73. Compassion-Focused Therapy and Schizotypy: An Exploration of an Evolution-Informed Biopsychosocial Approach
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Gilbert, Paul, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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74. The Role of Attachment Processes in the Psychosis Spectrum
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Berry, Katherine, Vikram, Anvita, Muller, Claire, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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75. A (Cross-)Cultural Look at Schizotypy
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Cheli, Simone, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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76. Understanding the Phenomenology of Schizotypy and Schizotypal Personality Disorder: An Application of the Integrative Model of Metacognition
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Lysaker, Paul H., Wiesepape, Courtney N., Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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77. Conceptualization and Assessment of Multidimensional Schizotypy
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Barrantes-Vidal, Neus, Kwapil, Thomas R., Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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78. Evolutionary Aspects of Schizotypy
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Cheli, Simone, Brüne, Martin, Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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79. The Neurodevelopmental Considerations of Schizotypy
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Snyder, Madeline E., Blank, Jennifer M., Bridgwater, Miranda A., Giljen, Maksim, Petti, Emily, Schiffman, Jason, Martin, Elizabeth A., Cheli, Simone, editor, and Lysaker, Paul H., editor
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- 2023
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80. Schizotypal traits in a large sample of high-school and university students from Tunisia: correlates and measurement invariance of the arabic schizotypal personality questionnaire across age and sex
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Feten Fekih-Romdhane, Abir Hakiri, Manel Stambouli, Wissal Cherif, Rami Away, Amani Amri, Majda Cheour, and Souheil Hallit
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Schizotypy ,Schizotypal traits ,Adolescents and young adults ,Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire ,Measurement Invariance ,Arabic ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background The main goal of the present study was to examine the characteristics of schizotypal traits and their correlations with genetic (i.e., family history of mental illness), demographic (i.e., age, sex), environmental (e.g., income, urbanicity, tobacco/alcohol/cannabis use), and psychological (i.e., personal history of mental illness other than psychosis) factors in Tunisian high-school and university students. Our secondary goal was to contribute the literature by examining the factor structure and factorial invariance of the Arabic Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) across sex and age (adolescents [12–18 years] vs. young adults [18–35 years]) groups. Method This was a cross-sectional study involving 3166 students: 1160 (36.6%) high-school students (53.0% females, aged 14.9 ± 1.8); and 2006 (63.4%) university students (63.9% females, aged 21.8 ± 2.3). All students were asked to complete a paper-and-pencil self-administered questionnaire containing sociodemographic characteristics as well as the Arabic version of the SPQ. Results The total sample yielded total SPQ scores of 24.1 ± 16.6 out of 74. The SPQ yielded good composite reliability as attested by McDonald's omega values ranging from .68 to .80 for all nine subscales. Confirmatory Factor Analysis indicated that fit of the 9-factor model of SPQ scores was acceptable. This model is invariant (at the configural, metric and structural levels) across sex and age. Except for “Odd or eccentric behavior”, all schizotypy features were significantly higher among female students compared to males. Multivariable analyses showed that female sex, being a university student, lowest family incomes, tobacco use, and having a personal history of psychiatric illness were significantly associated with higher positive, negative and disorganized schizotypy subscales scores. Conclusion Future research still needs to confirm our findings and investigate the contribution of the identified factors in the development of clinical psychosis. We can also conclude that the Arabic SPQ is appropriate for measuring and comparing schizotypy across age and sex in clinical and research settings. These findings are highly relevant and essential for ensuring the clinical utility and applicability of the SPQ in cross-cultural research.
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- 2023
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81. Reduced MMN-indexed auditory change detection in a non-clinical high schizotypy sample
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Jenna N. Bissonnette, T-Jay Anderson, Lauren Ross, Ashley M. Francis, Kaitlyn Napier, N. Will Shead, and Derek J. Fisher
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electroencephalography ,event-related potential ,impulsivity ,mismatch negativity ,schizotypy ,sensation seeking ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Schizotypal traits include abnormalities in cognition, behavior, and interpersonal relationships that are similar, yet less severe than psychotic symptomology. It is estimated that approximately 5% of the general population displays psychotic symptoms and experiences that can be considered schizotypal in nature, but there is little research examining the neurological correlates of these traits. The mismatch negativity (MMN) event-related potential is an objective measure of auditory change detection derived from electroencephalography. The current study contributes to the limited body of evidence examining the neurobiological underpinnings of schizotypy in a non-clinical sample using the MMN. Participants were recruited from the general population and divided into high and low-schizotypy groups for comparison. Individuals with high schizotypal traits displayed reduced MMN amplitudes in response to frequency and location deviants, and longer MMN latencies in response to location deviants. Specific sub-traits of schizotypy were uniquely related to frequency and location amplitudes, suggesting the previously reported inconsistencies in the literature may be due to diverse samples and differing deviant tone types. Finally, impulsivity and sensation-seeking likely contributed to the slower processing seen in location deviance detection. Ultimately, the current results provide evidence that the neurobiological abnormalities seen in clinical populations of schizotypal personality disorder and psychosis also extend to non-clinical populations.
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- 2024
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82. Intrusive-like memory errors associate with positive schizotypy
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William N. Koller and Tyrone D. Cannon
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Memory ,Schizotypy ,Schizophrenia ,False alarms ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Schizophrenia is characterized by memory impairments, yet the relationships between its distinct symptom clusters (i.e., positive, negative, disorganized) and specific aspects of memory dysfunction remain poorly characterized. In the present study, we compiled a large analog sample (N = 795) to test whether positive symptoms, versus negative and disorganized symptoms, were uniquely and differentially related to false alarm versus miss errors during recognition memory. Mixed-effects beta regression analyses revealed that both positive schizotypy and paranoia were more strongly associated with false alarms than misses. Disorganized schizotypy showed a similar pattern, though to a lesser extent; negative schizotypy showed a significant relationship with neither false alarm nor miss errors. We suggest that those higher in positive schizotypy are especially prone to misattribute signal to noise stimuli during recognition memory – characteristic of an “intrusive-like” profile of memory impairment, wherein context-irrelevant stimuli trigger spurious retrieval events – and speculate on the neural processes that might give rise to this asymmetry.
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- 2023
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83. Cognitive‐perceptual traits associated with autism and schizotypy influence use of physics during predictive visual tracking.
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Cooper, Chloe and Meso, Andrew Isaac
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SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *AUTISM spectrum disorders , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *AUTISM , *ARTIFICIAL satellite tracking - Abstract
Schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can disrupt cognition and consequently behaviour. Traits of ASD and the subclinical manifestation of schizophrenia called schizotypy have been studied in healthy populations with overlap found in trait profiles linking ASD social deficits to negative schizotypy and ASD attention to detail to positive schizotypy. Here, we probed the relationship between subtrait profiles, cognition and behaviour, using a predictive tracking task to measure individuals' eye movements under three gravity conditions. A total of 48 healthy participants tracked an on‐screen projected ball under familiar gravity, inverted upward acceleration (against gravity) and horizontal gravity control conditions while eye movements were recorded and dynamic performance quantified. Participants completed ASD and schizotypy inventories generating highly correlated scores, r = 0.73. All tracked best under the gravity condition, producing anticipatory downward responses from stimulus onset which were delayed under upward inverted gravity. Tracking performance was not associated with overall ASD or schizotypy trait levels. Combining measures using principal components analysis (PCA), we decomposed the inventories into subtraits unveiling interesting patterns. Positive schizotypy was associated with ASD dimensions of rigidity, odd behaviour and face processing, which all linked to anticipatory tracking responses under inverted gravity. In contrast, negative schizotypy was associated with ASD dimensions of social interactions and rigidity and to early stimulus‐driven tracking under gravity. There was also substantial nonspecific overlap between ASD and schizotypy dissociated from tracking. Our work links positive‐odd traits with anticipatory tracking when physics rules are violated and negative‐social traits with exploitation of physics laws of motion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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84. Conceptualizing a less paranoid schizophrenia.
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Long, James and Hull, Rachel
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FIVE-factor model of personality , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PERSONALITY , *CLINICAL psychology , *EMOTIONAL trauma , *PHENOMENOLOGY , *PARANOIA - Abstract
Schizophrenia stands as one of the most studied and storied disorders in the history of clinical psychology; however, it remains a nexus of conflicting and competing conceptualizations. Patients endure great stigma, poor treatment outcomes, and condemnatory prognosis. Current conceptualizations suffer from unstable categorical borders, heterogeneity in presentation, outcome and etiology, and holes in etiological models. Taken in aggregate, research and clinical experience indicate that the class of psychopathologies oriented toward schizophrenia are best understood as spectra of phenomenological, cognitive, and behavioral modalities. These apparently taxonomic expressions are rooted in normal human personality traits as described in both psychodynamic and Five Factor personality models, and more accurately represent explicable distress reactions to biopsychosocial stress and trauma. Current categorical approaches are internally hampered by axiomatic bias and systemic inertia rooted in the foundational history of psychological inquiry; however, when such axioms are schematically decentralized, convergent cross-disciplinary evidence outlines a more robust explanatory construct. By reconceptualizing these disorders under a dimensional and cybernetic model, the aforementioned issues of instability and inaccuracy may be resolved, while simultaneously opening avenues for both early detection and intervention, as well as for more targeted and effective treatment approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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85. Crowd-sourced investigation of a potential relationship between Bartonella-associated cutaneous lesions and neuropsychiatric symptoms.
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Stewart, Zachary, Korsapathy, Sanvi, and Frohlich, Flavio
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SYMPTOMS ,BARTONELLA ,SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder ,ANXIETY ,FEVER ,APATHY - Abstract
Introduction: Preliminary studies suggest that infection with Bartonella bacteria can not only cause a characteristic rash, headache, fever, and fatigue but also neuropsychiatric symptoms. To date, this association has only been reported in case studies, and it remains unclear if this association generalizes to larger samples. Methods: We used Amazon's Mechanical Turk (MTurk) to crowdsource a large sample (N = 996) of individuals to ascertain the extent to which the presence of participant-identified Bartonella-associated cutaneous lesions (BACL) was associated with self-reported measures of anxiety, depression, and schizotypy. Participants were asked to select images of cutaneous lesions they had seen on their own bodies and complete a battery of self-report questionnaires to assess psychiatric symptoms. Participants were not informed that the focus of the study was on potential dermatological lesions associated with Bartonella. Point-biserial correlations were used to determine the potential relationship between selecting a BACL image and the severity of self-reported psychiatric symptoms. Results: Scores of anxiety, depression, and schizotypy were positively and significantly correlated with selecting a BACL image. Furthermore, self-report scores of 10 or higher on the GAD-7 and PHQ-9, which represent the suggested clinical cuto [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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86. Comparing two measures of schizotypy and their relationship with psychological distress in British university students.
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Haenschel, Corinna, Krupic, Dino, Hoff, Antonia, Corr, Philip J., Gaigg, Sebastian, and Fett, Anne‐Kathrin
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PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *ANXIETY sensitivity , *SOCIAL anxiety , *CONFIRMATORY factor analysis , *PERSONALITY questionnaires , *COLLEGE students - Abstract
Aims: Schizotypy reflects the vulnerability to schizophrenia in the general population. Different questionnaires have been developed to measure aspects of schizotypy. Higher schizotypy scores have also been linked with depression, anxiety, and stress sensitivity. Here we examine the associations of schizotypy with symptoms of depression and anxiety in a sample of university students, using two different measures (N = 271). Methods: A series of confirmatory factor analyses was used to examine two distinct and frequently employed measures of schizotypy: the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE), and the Schizotypy Personality Questionnaire (SPQ). We assessed their relationship with each other and their predictive validity for anxiety, depression, and stress sensitivity. Results: Our results indicated the brief 7‐factor SPQ (SPQ‐BR) factor solution for the SPQ and the 15‐item and 3 factor solution for the CAPE (i.e., CAPE‐P15) as best fitting models. Particularly the CAPE dimension of persecutory ideation was a strong predictor of anxiety, depression, and stress sensitivity, whereas the SPQ dimensions of no close friends and social anxiety predicted psychological distress and stress in our student sample. Conclusions: Our findings extend earlier work in general and patient samples and point to the importance of understanding the contribution of particularly positive schizotypy symptoms and different interpersonal aspects to psychological distress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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87. Threatening Beliefs About Self and Others Moderate the Association Between Psychoticism and Psychological Distress.
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Cheli, Simone, Cavalletti, Veronica, and Hopwood, Christopher J.
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- 2023
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88. Examining Cognitive Biases Uniquely Associated with Schizotypy.
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Zahid, Aqsa and Best, Michael W.
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COGNITIVE bias , *SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *SEX (Biology) , *ANXIETY disorders - Abstract
Introduction: Individuals with schizotypy can experience a number of cognitive biases that may increase their risk in developing schizophrenia-spectrum psychopathology. However, cognitive biases are also present in mood and anxiety disorders, and it is currently unclear which biases are specific to schizotypy and which may be a result of comorbid depression and/or anxiety. Methods: 462 participants completed measures of depression, anxiety, cognitive biases, cognitive schemas, and schizotypy. Correlation analyses were conducted to examine the relationship between these constructs. Three hierarchical regression analyses were conducted to examine if schizotypy, depression, and anxiety explained a statistically significant amount of variance in cognitive biases after controlling for depression and anxiety, schizotypy and anxiety, and schizotypy and depression, respectively. Moderated regression analyses were also conducted to investigate the moderating role of biological sex and ethnicity in the association between cognitive biases and schizotypy. Results: Self-referential processing, belief inflexibility, and attention for threat were associated with schizotypy. The belief inflexibility bias and social cognition problems were specifically associated with schizotypy after controlling for depression and anxiety and were not directly associated with either depression or anxiety. These associations were not moderated by biological sex or ethnicity. Conclusion: The belief inflexibility bias may be an important cognitive bias underlying schizotypal personality, and further research will be important to determine whether this bias is also associated with an increased likelihood of transitioning to psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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89. Empirically-derived dimensions of childhood adversity and cumulative risk: associations with measures of depression, anxiety, and psychosis-spectrum psychopathology.
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Gizdic, Alena, Sheinbaum, Tamara, Kwapil, Thomas R., and Barrantes-Vidal, Neus
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- *
PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *ANXIETY , *YOUNG adults , *MENTAL depression , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *ABUSE of older people - Abstract
Background: Investigating different approaches to operationalizing childhood adversity and how they relate to transdiagnostic psychopathology is relevant to advance research on mechanistic processes and to inform intervention efforts. To our knowledge, previous studies have not used questionnaire and interview measures of childhood adversity to examine factor-analytic and cumulative-risk approaches in a complementary manner. Objective: The first aim of this study was to identify the dimensions underlying multiple subscales from three well-established childhood adversity measures (the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, the Childhood Experience of Care and Abuse Interview, and the Interview for Traumatic Events in Childhood) and to create a cumulative risk index based on the resulting dimensions. The second aim of the study was to examine the childhood adversity dimensions and the cumulative risk index as predictors of measures of depression, anxiety, and psychosis-spectrum psychopathology. Method: Participants were 214 nonclinically ascertained young adults who were administered questionnaire and interview measures of depression, anxiety, psychosis-spectrum phenomena, and childhood adversity. Results: Four childhood adversity dimensions were identified that captured experiences in the domains of Intrafamilial Adversity, Deprivation, Threat, and Sexual Abuse. As hypothesized, the adversity dimensions demonstrated some specificity in their associations with psychopathology symptoms. Deprivation was uniquely associated with the negative symptom dimension of psychosis (negative schizotypy and schizoid symptoms), Intrafamilial Adversity with schizotypal symptoms, and Threat with depression, anxiety, and psychosis-spectrum symptoms. No associations were found with the Sexual Abuse dimension. Finally, the cumulative risk index was associated with all the outcome measures. Conclusions: The findings support the use of both the empirically-derived adversity dimensions and the cumulative risk index and suggest that these approaches may facilitate different research objectives. This study contributes to our understanding of the complexity of childhood adversity and its links to different expressions of psychopathology. We investigated how different approaches to operationalizing childhood adversity relate to transdiagnostic psychopathology. Four childhood adversity dimensions were found to underlie multiple subscales from three well-established childhood adversity measures. The childhood adversity dimensions demonstrated some specificity in their associations with the psychopathology symptom domains and the cumulative risk index was associated with all the outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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90. Mentalizing in individuals with state and trait risk for psychosis: a systematic review.
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De Salve, Francesca, Rossi, Chiara, and Oasi, Osmano
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THEORY of mind ,PSYCHOSES ,YOUNG adults ,PROGNOSIS ,METACOGNITION - Abstract
Background: Mentalization is an umbrella concept defined as the ability to interpret one's and others' mental states. Previous studies have hypothesized that mentalization may be a crucial resilience factor that significantly moderates the likelihood of developing psychotic disorders in individuals with both state and trait risk factors for the illness. Purpose: The study reviews the role of mentalizing abilities (e.g., reflective functioning, Theory of Mind (ToM), and metacognition) in young adults with At-Risk Mental States (ARMS) and schizotypal traits. Specifically, the objective is to include articles that (a) evaluate the links between low mentalizing and both state (ARMS/CHR) and trait (schizotypy) risk for psychosis (b) compare the differences in mentalizing abilities between individuals with ARMS, schizotypy, full-blown psychosis, and healthy controls. Method: Electronic databases (PsycINFO, PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar) were used to search for articles, while Rayyan was employed to facilitate the screening and selection of studies. Eligible studies are original English-language; peer-reviewed research articles on populations that met validated risk diagnostic criteria for psychosis, ARMS, and healthy controls; empirical studies evaluating the association or differences between psychotic risk and mentalizing abilities. Non-English language studies, the ones not considering state or trait risk for psychosis, and qualitative studies were excluded. After the application of the PRISMA checklist and the inclusion and exclusion criteria previously mentioned, 10 articles were extracted. The systematic review has been registered on Prospero (CRD42023397594). Results: Low levels of reflective functioning and metacognition may predict a transition to psychosis. In addition, reflective functioning and metacognitive impairments are associated with attenuated psychotic symptoms in both state risk groups and in non-clinical individuals with schizotypal traits. Concerning ToM tasks, mixed results emerged. Conclusion: The results obtained from the review suggest that the application of strategies to attenuate maladaptive metacognitive beliefs and low mentalization may be equally effective in improving psychotic symptoms. The assessment of mentalization and metacognition could potentially provide additional prognostic value over factors predisposing to psychosis. Good mentalization and metacognition functioning should be considered as protective factors able to minimize the transition to psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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91. The role of mentalizing in the relationship between schizotypal personality traits and state signs of psychosis risk captured by cognitive and perceptive basic symptoms.
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Salaminios, George, Sprüngli-Toffel, Elodie, Michel, Chantal, Morosan, Larisa, Eliez, Stephan, Armando, Marco, Fonseca-Pedrero, Eduardo, Derome, Melodie, Schultze-Lutter, Frauke, and Debbané, Martin
- Subjects
PERSONALITY ,SPEECH anxiety ,YOUNG adults ,SOCIAL anxiety ,PSYCHOSES ,PERSONALITY questionnaires - Abstract
Objective: Schizotypal traits and disturbances in mentalizing (the capacity to understand the mental states driving one's own and others' behaviors) have been implicated in increased vulnerability for psychosis. Therefore, we explored the associations linking schizotypal traits, mentalizing difficulties and their interactions to clinical high-risk for psychosis (CHR-P), as captured by the Basic Symptoms (BS) approach, during adolescence and young adulthood. Methods: Eighty-seven adolescents and young adults from the general population (46% male, 44% female; age: 14-23 years) were assessed with the Schizophrenia Proneness Interview (SPI-CY/A) for 11 perceptive and cognitive BS, with the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ) for schizotypal traits, and with the Reflective Functioning Questionnaire (RFQ) for self-reported mentalizing abilities. The RFQ evaluates the level of certainty (RFQc scale) and uncertainty (RFQu scale) with which individuals use mental state information to explain their own and others' behaviors. Results: Logistic regression models showed significant positive effects of the SPQ disorganization scale on perceptive BS and of the SPQ interpersonal scale on cognitive BS. Post-hoc analyses revealed that schizotypal features pertaining to odd speech and social anxiety, respectively, were associated with perceptive and cognitive BS. Furthermore, higher scores on the RFQu scale and lower scores on the RFQc scale independently explained the presence of cognitive BS. Finally, significant interaction effects between RFQc and SPQ odd speech on perceptive BS, and between RFQc and SPQ social anxiety on cognitive BS were found. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that schizotypal traits and mentalizing significantly relate both independently and through their interactions to the presence of cognitive and perceptive BS included in CHR-P criteria. Furthermore, mentalizing dysfunction may contribute in the relation between schizotypal traits and early state signs of CHR-P. Mentalizing may support both detection and early treatment of CHR-P among adolescents and young adults who present with trait risk for psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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92. Mnemonic discrimination deficits in multidimensional schizotypy.
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Sahakyan, Lili, Wahlheim, Christopher N., and Kwapil, Thomas R.
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SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *MNEMONICS , *EPISODIC memory , *DIFFERENTIATION (Cognition) , *YOUNG adults - Abstract
Current developmental psychopathology models indicate that schizophrenia can be understood as the most extreme expression of a multidimensional continuum of symptoms and impairment referred to as schizotypy. In nondisordered adults, schizotypy predicts risk for developing schizophrenia‐spectrum psychopathology. Schizophrenia is associated with disruptions in detecting subtle differences between objects, which is linked to hippocampal dysfunction. These disruptions have been shown in the Mnemonic Similarity Task (MST) when patients are less likely to reject lures that are similar but not identical to studied objects, and instead mistake them for studied items. This pattern of errors may be a behavioral manifestation of impaired pattern separation, a key episodic memory ability associated with hippocampal integrity and overreliance on pattern completion. We examined whether multidimensional schizotypy is associated with such deficits in nondisordered young adults. Participants (n = 230) were assessed for positive, negative, and disorganized schizotypy and completed the MST and a perceptual discrimination task. MST performance showed that a combination of elevated negative and disorganized schizotypy was associated with decreased rejections of similar lures because they were mistakenly identified as studied items. These deficits were not observed in traditional recognition measures within the same task, nor in perceptual discrimination, suggesting that mnemonic discrimination deficits assessed by MST were selective and did not reflect generalized deficits. These findings extend the results obtained in schizophrenia patients and support a multidimensional model of schizophrenia‐spectrum psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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93. Evaluating schizotypy and alcohol usage as predictors of increased engagement in risky sexual behaviors in an undergraduate sample.
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Cartier, Megan L. and Dinzeo, Thomas
- Subjects
UNSAFE sex ,SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,RISK-taking behavior ,AT-risk behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,PSYCHONEUROIMMUNOLOGY - Abstract
The window of risk for developing a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder overlaps with young adulthood, a time of increased independence and self-sufficiency. Research suggests that this period is also associated with increased substance use and risky sexual encounters. The current study aimed to examine rates of alcohol usage and risky sexual behaviors in those demonstrating higher rates of schizotypy (i.e., risk indicator for schizophrenia). Data was collected at a midsized university in the Northeastern United States during the 2019–2020 and 2020–2021 academic years. A total of 385 undergraduate students enrolled in introductory psychology classes completed the study either in-person or online. The study consisted of questionnaires related to alcohol usage, rates of sexual risk behaviors, and schizotypal traits. Due to COVID-19 restrictions and the time period covered by the sexual risk measure (i.e., the last six months), the authors deemed it necessary to omit certain participants, leaving 179 participants in our main analyses. Participants who reported higher levels of alcohol usage and positive schizotypy demonstrated increased engagement in specific sexual risk behaviors, while higher levels of negative schizotypy may have acted as a protective factor against engagement in sexual risk. Descriptive data for participants collected during the pandemic period was provided for comparison and for the interest of future researchers looking at the pandemic period (n = 180). The current findings provide a snapshot (baseline rate) of sexual behavior and alcohol usage in a nonclinical sample with varying risk for psychosis that extends previous research involving clinical samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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94. Görsel İllüzyonların Nörotipik ve Patolojik Algı Hakkında Öğrettikleri.
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DÖVENCİOĞLU, Dicle
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VISUAL perception , *OPTICAL illusions , *REFRACTION (Optics) , *OPTICAL reflection , *HUMAN behavior - Abstract
Visual illusions are popularly referred to as the phenomena where the eye sees something that is not there. The aim of this review is to show that illusions are not the occasional misinterpretations of the physical world. Illusions are critical to our understanding of perceptual processes. The cause of illusions can vary depending on the reflection or refraction of light, how the brain processes the information reaching the retina, or how the visual system works when perceiving depth. Illusions, which have inspired both artists and scientists, have been instrumental in our understanding of human perception and the functioning of the brain in general. At the beginning of this article, the classes that emerge from a scientific perspective will be defined in parallel with the hierarchical visual perception. Examples of illusions that inform us about the physiological (corresponding to the early stages of visual perception) processes and cognitive (corresponding to higher level stages of visual perception) strategies will be given, and the factors that may cause them will be examined. In the light of theoretical approaches and perceptual grouping concepts, I will discuss how these interpretations help us to understand the brain and human nature. Next, I will give examples of findings and applications in clinical populations to touch on the role of illusions in our understanding of visual perception in e.g. schizophrenia patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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95. Exploring the associations between dimensions of schizotypy and social defeat.
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Sorenson, Rory P., Rossell, Susan L., and Sumner, Philip J.
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SELF-evaluation , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *SOCIAL defeat , *RISK assessment , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
This study investigated relationships between self-reported experiences of social defeat and individual dimensions of self-reported schizotypy. 1632 adults aged between 18 and 79 participated across two non-clinical samples (n = 920, n = 712). Multiple regression analyses tested the relationships between dimensions of schizotypy and social defeat. The analyses demonstrated evidence of relationships between increased overall schizotypy and increased social defeat, with schizotypal suspiciousness and disorganised or constrained thought and speech consistently emerging as the two most important individual predictors. These results suggest that increased schizotypy is associated with increased social defeat, although the specific relationships may depend on the specific aspects of social defeat and schizotypy being measured. Future research should investigate whether social defeat plays a role in the manifestation of specific schizotypy traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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96. Dissecting Schizotypy and Its Association With Cognition and Polygenic Risk for Schizophrenia in a Nonclinical Sample.
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Tiego, Jeggan, Thompson, Kate, Arnatkeviciute, Aurina, Hawi, Ziarih, Finlay, Amy, Sabaroedin, Kristina, Johnson, Beth, Bellgrove, Mark A, and Fornito, Alex
- Subjects
SCHIZOPHRENIA risk factors ,COGNITION disorder risk factors ,INTELLECTUAL freedom ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,SELF-evaluation ,REGRESSION analysis ,RISK assessment ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,INTELLECT ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL correlation ,PHENOTYPES - Abstract
Schizotypy is a multidimensional construct that captures a continuum of risk for developing schizophrenia-spectrum psychopathology. Existing 3-factor models of schizotypy, consisting of positive, negative, and disorganized dimensions have yielded mixed evidence of genetic continuity with schizophrenia using polygenic risk scores. Here, we propose an approach that involves splitting positive and negative schizotypy into more specific subdimensions that are phenotypically continuous with distinct positive symptoms and negative symptoms recognized in clinical schizophrenia. We used item response theory to derive high-precision estimates of psychometric schizotypy using 251 self-report items obtained from a non-clinical sample of 727 (424 females) adults. These subdimensions were organized hierarchically using structural equation modeling into 3 empirically independent higher-order dimensions enabling associations with polygenic risk for schizophrenia to be examined at different levels of phenotypic generality and specificity. Results revealed that polygenic risk for schizophrenia was associated with variance specific to delusional experiences (γ = 0.093, P =.001) and reduced social interest and engagement (γ = 0.076, P =.020), and these effects were not mediated via the higher-order general, positive, or negative schizotypy factors. We further fractionated general intellectual functioning into fluid and crystallized intelligence in 446 (246 females) participants that underwent onsite cognitive assessment. Polygenic risk scores explained 3.6% of the variance in crystallized intelligence. Our precision phenotyping approach could be used to enhance the etiologic signal in future genetic association studies and improve the detection and prevention of schizophrenia-spectrum psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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97. Reading skills in mental illness : a multimodal analysis
- Author
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Vanova, Martina, Kumari, V., and Jennings, B.
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Dimensional psychopathology ,Psychopathy ,Schizotypy ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Forensic psychiatry - Abstract
Reading is a complex process involving multiple skills - i.e., phonological processing, comprehension, and word recognition. It is also a significant predictor of socio-economic status, academic achievement, and has vast importance in everyday functioning. Reading deficits can lead to maladaptive behaviour and consequently increase the risk of incarceration. Severe reading skills deficits are present in schizophrenia, and to some extent in people with psychopathy and forensic populations (Chapter 2 - systematic review and meta-analysis). Considering the overlap between discreet clinical diagnoses and the presence of symptoms and psychopathology-related traits in non-clinical populations, this thesis aimed to examine the behavioural and neurofunctional associations between reading skills and dimensional psychopathology-related traits in the general and clinical populations. To address these aims, three empirical investigations were carried out: i) behavioural studies (Chapters 4 and 5) investigating the relationship between reading-related skills, as indexed by performance on a lexical decision task (LDT) requiring word-nonword recognition, and a range of psychopathologyrelated traits (schizotypy, psychopathy, impulsivity, and affective traits) in a general population sample (N = 78), ii) a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study (Chapter 6) investigating the neural correlates of this relationship (N = 22), and iii) a preliminary clinical study (Chapter 7) investigating the relationship between reading skills of phonological processing and comprehension, dimensional psychopathology, and cognition (verbal learning and memory, IQ, and executive functioning) in a forensic psychiatric sample (N = 15). The findings suggest that traits of positive schizotypy (Unusual Experiences), fearless dominance (Meanness) and callous aggression (Boldness) in psychopathy, and motor impulsivity can modulate behavioural responses in word-nonword recognition (LDT performance) in the general population. Higher motor impulsivity was the trait most strongly associated with lower LDT performance accuracy in non-native speakers. At the neural level also, motor impulsivity was most consistently associated with lower activity in some of the brain areas that are crucial for word recognition, namely the fusiform and inferior frontal gyri (IFG). In the forensic psychiatric sample, 13/15 patients were diagnosed with a psychotic disorder and all reading skills were significantly below their age norms and showed some association with executive function and verbal learning. In this sample, Lifestyle psychopathy was significantly associated with poor LDT performance, especially in low-frequency words recognition and Cognitive Perceptual aspect of positive schizotypy with severe deficits in reading comprehension, overall reading ability, and poor low-frequency word recognition. In conclusion, positive schizotypy and psychosis seem to be associated with poor reading skills. Higher psychopathy and motor impulsivity traits seem to predict of poor reading skills across the general and clinical populations and modulate neural activity during correct word-nonword recognition. These findings provide insight into the relationship between dimensional psychopathology-related traits, their comorbidities, and reading skills in clinical and non-clinical populations, and suggest that poor reading skills in clinical populations should be considered as important treatment targets.
- Published
- 2021
98. Characterising social cognition and neurobiological risk factors for psychosis in a high schizotypy sample : a multimodal approach
- Author
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Kozhuharova, Petya, Allen, Paul, and Diaconescu, Andreea
- Subjects
616.89 ,Schizotypy ,psychosis risks ,cognition ,social cognition ,MRI ,fMRI ,computational analysis - Abstract
Introduction: Schizophrenia symptomatology exists on a continuum ranging from subclinical psychotic-like experiences in the general population (schizotypy) to full-blown clinical symptoms. High schizotypy individuals are at an increased risk for developing clinical diagnoses, yet previous work has not investigated key neural abnormalities of schizophrenia in these samples. Methods: To ensure findings are informative for clinical risk, we only recruited individuals scoring at the extreme low/high end of the Schizotypy Personality Questionnaire. 27 high schizotypy (HS) and 26 low schizotypy (LS) individuals to take part in two functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) tasks assessing social learning. Participants also underwent a resting state fMRI and a magnetic resonance spectroscopy scan. Results: HS subjects, compared to LS, present with abnormal learning of social information. HS overestimate the volatility of social cues and are slower to learn about global changes in social context. Furthermore, HS subjects show reduced neural activity in the dopaminergic midbrain and increased frontal cortex activity in response to prediction errors during social learning. HS subjects also present with a reduced resting-state functional connectivity between hippocampus and striatum/thalamus and with reduced GABA and Glu metabolite levels in the prefrontal cortex. Discussion: HS subjects, representing the earliest risk for clinical transition to schizophrenia, already present with key neural abnormalities implicated in progression, mainly abnormal hippocampal functioning and abnormal GABA/Glu levels. These results encourage investigations of HS to facilitate a comprehensive view of risk/protective factors for clinical transition. The results also show that HS subjects already present with abnormal hierarchical learning as seen in clinical samples. HS subjects neutrally underweight prediction errors indicating an improper processing of these learning cues. They also present with compensatory activity in frontal cortex enabling behavioural performance similar to LS. The abnormal learning from social cues could explain not only the social functioning deficits key to schizophrenia, but also other cognitive biases observed in these populations.
- Published
- 2021
99. Social functioning in schizotypy: How affect influences social behavior in daily life.
- Author
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Minor, Kyle, Hardin, Kathryn, Beaudette, Danielle, Waters, Lesley, White, Anna, Gonzenbach, Virgilio, and Robbins, Megan
- Subjects
affect ,ecological momentary assessment ,experience sampling ,schizotypy ,social functioning ,Adolescent ,Affect ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Schizotypal Personality Disorder ,Social Behavior ,Social Interaction ,Students ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Young Adult - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Social deficits are already exhibited by people at risk for schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. Technological advances have made passive detection of social deficits possible at granular levels. METHOD: In this real-world study, we tested if schizotypy status (high/low) predicted two types of social behavior: (1) being around other people; and (2) actively socializing with others. We also examined if schizotypy influences relationships between social behavior and affect using subjective and objective instruments. RESULTS: Our findings revealed that socializing with others was significantly decreased in the high schizotypy group. Positive affect increased in social situations and predicted later social behavior in those low, but not high, in schizotypy. CONCLUSION: Decreased social behavior in schizotypy may be explained, in part, by these individuals being less incentivized than their peers to pursue social situations. Future studies should test this explanation in larger samples exhibiting elevated positive, negative, and disorganized schizotypy traits.
- Published
- 2020
100. Differential Risk: Gender and Racial Differences in the Relationship between Trauma, Discrimination, and Schizotypy
- Author
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Mahogany A. Monette, Madisen T. Russell, Danielle B. Abel, Jarrett T. Lewis, Jessica L. Mickens, Evan J. Myers, Megan M. Hricovec, David C. Cicero, J. Wolny, William P. Hetrick, Michael D. Masucci, Alex S. Cohen, Christopher J. Burgin, Thomas R. Kwapil, and Kyle S. Minor
- Subjects
trauma ,racial discrimination ,schizotypy ,disparities ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Traumatic experiences are associated with increased experiences of positive schizotypy. This may be especially important for People of Color, who experience higher rates of trauma and racial discrimination. No study to date has examined how racial disparities in traumatic experiences may impact schizotypy. Furthermore, of the studies that have examined the relationship between trauma and schizotypy, none have examined racial discrimination as a potential moderator. The present study examined if racial discrimination moderates the relationship between trauma and multidimensional (positive, negative, and disorganized) schizotypy. In a sample of 770 college students, we conducted chi-squared analyses, analyses of variance, and stepwise regressions. We found that Black students experienced significantly higher racial discrimination and trauma than Latinx and Asian students. Furthermore, Black and Latinx students experienced significantly more multidimensional schizotypy items than Asian students. Trauma and racial discrimination explained 8 to 23% of the variance in each dimension of schizotypy. Racial discrimination did not moderate the relationships between trauma and multidimensional schizotypy. Our findings suggest that we need to examine risk factors that may prevent recovery from psychotic disorders. Additionally, disorganized schizotypy showed the most robust associations and may be a critical site of intervention.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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