Literature DB >> 20735885

Social world interactions: how company connects to paranoia.

D Collip1, M Oorschot, V Thewissen, J Van Os, R Bentall, I Myin-Germeys.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Experimental studies have indicated that social contact, even when it is neutral, triggers paranoid thinking in people who score high on clinical or subclinical paranoia. We investigated whether contextual variables are predictive of momentary increases in the intensity of paranoid thinking in a sample of participants ranging across a psychometric paranoia continuum.
METHOD: The sample (n=154) consisted of 30 currently paranoid patients, 34 currently non-paranoid patients, 15 remitted psychotic patients, 38 high-schizotypy participants, and 37 control subjects. Based on their total score on Fenigstein's Paranoia Scale (PS), three groups with different degrees of paranoia were defined. The Experience Sampling Method (ESM), a structured diary technique, was used to assess momentary social context, perceived social threat and paranoia in daily life.
RESULTS: There were differences in the effect of social company on momentary levels of paranoia and perceived social threat across the range of trait paranoia. The low and medium paranoia groups reported higher levels of perceived social threat when they were with less-familiar compared to familiar individuals. The medium paranoia group reported more paranoia in less-familiar company. The high paranoia group reported no difference in the perception of social threat or momentary paranoia between familiar and unfamiliar contacts.
CONCLUSIONS: Paranoid thinking is context dependent in individuals with medium or at-risk levels of trait paranoia. Perceived social threat seems to be context dependent in the low paranoia group. However, at high levels of trait paranoia, momentary paranoia and momentary perceived social threat become autonomous and independent of social reality.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20735885     DOI: 10.1017/S0033291710001558

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  20 in total

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2.  Experience sampling methodology in mental health research: new insights and technical developments.

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4.  From environment to therapy in psychosis: a real-world momentary assessment approach.

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5.  Self-reported Cognitive Biases Moderate the Associations Between Social Stress and Paranoid Ideation in a Virtual Reality Experimental Study.

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6.  Environmental Social Stress, Paranoia and Psychosis Liability: A Virtual Reality Study.

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7.  What Do People With Schizophrenia Do All Day? Ecological Momentary Assessment of Real-World Functioning in Schizophrenia.

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Review 9.  Unravelling psychosis: psychosocial epidemiology, mechanism, and meaning.

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10.  Altered transfer of momentary mental states (ATOMS) as the basic unit of psychosis liability in interaction with environment and emotions.

Authors:  Johanna T W Wigman; Dina Collip; Marieke Wichers; Philippe Delespaul; Catherine Derom; Evert Thiery; Wilma A M Vollebergh; Tineke Lataster; Nele Jacobs; Inez Myin-Germeys; Jim van Os
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