• Title of article

    PERSECUTORY DELUSIONS: A REVIEW AND THEORETICAL INTEGRATION

  • Author/Authors

    Richard P. Bentall، نويسنده , , Rhiannon Corcoran، نويسنده , , Robert Howard، نويسنده , , Nigel Blackwood، نويسنده , , Peter Kinderman، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    50
  • From page
    1143
  • To page
    1192
  • Abstract
    Persecutory (paranoid) delusions are a frequently observed clinical phenomenon. In recent years, an increasing volume of research has attempted to explain these types of beliefs in terms of psychological mechanisms. Theories have emphasized early experience, perceptual abnormalities, motivational factors, and information-processing deficits. In this article we review relevant findings, including our own studies of the role of causal attributions and theory of mind deficits. We propose a new integrative model that builds on this work. The core of the model is an account of the way that causal attributions influence self-representations, which in turn influence future attributions: the attribution–self-representation cycle. We argue that biases in this cycle cause negative events to be attributed to external agents and hence contribute to the building of a paranoid world view. These abnormalities are amenable to investigation by functional neuroimaging, and recent studies have implicated specific areas of neuroactivation. However, these findings do not necessarily suggest that paranoid delusions are entirely biological in origin, and there is evidence that adverse early experience may play a role in determining the development of a cognitive vulnerability to paranoid thinking.
  • Keywords
    Psychosis , Persecutory delusions
  • Journal title
    Clinical Psychology Review
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Clinical Psychology Review
  • Record number

    483658