Abstract: In two previous studies, it was observed that schizophrenic patients display increased confidence in memory errors compared with controls. The patient group displayed an increased proportion of errors in their knowledge system, quantified as the percentage of high-confident responses that are errors. The latter phenomenon has been termed knowledge corruption and is put forward as a risk factor for the emergence of delusions. In the present study, knowledge corruption was analyzed separately for different aspects of memory errors. A source-monitoring task was used, for which participants (30 schizo-phrenic patients with past or current paranoid ideas and 15 healthy controls) were asked to provide associates for each of 20 prime wor...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attributional style questionnaires and probabilist...
Background: The role of psychosis-related cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions) in a delusi...
Original article can be found at : http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright Elsevier [Full text of th...
In prior studies, it was observed that patients with schizophrenia show abnormally high knowledge co...
A number of recent studies have suggested that schizophrenia patients share metamemory deficits, par...
A number of recent studies have demonstrated that individuals with schizophrenia display knowledge c...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01918869 Copyright El...
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't;OBJECTIVE Delusional disorder has been traditiona...
A sentence verification task was developed to investigate semantic memory in schizophrenia. The test...
Delusions are a key symptom of psychosis and they are frequently distressing and disabling. Existing...
Poster PresentationBACKGROUND: In previous work1 we observed, in chronic patients, that a generalize...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Abstract: The ability to represent mental states of self and others to account for behavior is calle...
Objectives: New cognitive theories of delusions have proposed that deficit or bias in inference ...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attributional style questionnaires and probabilist...
Background: The role of psychosis-related cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions) in a delusi...
Original article can be found at : http://www.sciencedirect.com/ Copyright Elsevier [Full text of th...
In prior studies, it was observed that patients with schizophrenia show abnormally high knowledge co...
A number of recent studies have suggested that schizophrenia patients share metamemory deficits, par...
A number of recent studies have demonstrated that individuals with schizophrenia display knowledge c...
Original article can be found at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01918869 Copyright El...
Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't;OBJECTIVE Delusional disorder has been traditiona...
A sentence verification task was developed to investigate semantic memory in schizophrenia. The test...
Delusions are a key symptom of psychosis and they are frequently distressing and disabling. Existing...
Poster PresentationBACKGROUND: In previous work1 we observed, in chronic patients, that a generalize...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Abstract: The ability to represent mental states of self and others to account for behavior is calle...
Objectives: New cognitive theories of delusions have proposed that deficit or bias in inference ...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attributional style questionnaires and probabilist...
Background: The role of psychosis-related cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions) in a delusi...