Title of article
Jumping to conclusions and the continuum of delusional beliefs
Author/Authors
Debbie M. Warman، نويسنده , , Paul H. Lysaker، نويسنده , , Joel M. Martin، نويسنده , , Louanne Davis، نويسنده , , Samantha L. Haudenschield، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
15
From page
1255
To page
1269
Abstract
The present study examined the jumping to conclusions reasoning bias across the continuum of delusional ideation by investigating individuals with active delusions, delusion prone individuals, and non-delusion prone individuals. Neutral and highly self-referent probabilistic reasoning tasks were employed. Results indicated that individuals with delusions gathered significantly less information than delusion prone and non-delusion prone participants on both the neutral and self-referent tasks, (p<.001). Individuals with delusions made less accurate decisions than the delusion prone and non-delusion prone participants on both tasks (p<.001), yet were more confident about their decisions than were delusion prone and non-delusion prone participants on the self-referent task (p=.002). Those with delusions and those who were delusion prone reported higher confidence in their performance on the self-referent task than they did the neutral task (p=.02), indicating that high self-reference impacted information processing for individuals in both of these groups. The results are discussed in relation to previous research in the area of probabilistic reasoning and delusions.
Keywords
Reasoning , Psychosis , Cognitive , Delusions
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number
570157
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