International audienceThe dominant cognitive model that accounts for the persistence of delusional beliefs in schizophrenia postulates that patients suffer from a general deficit in belief revision. It is generally assumed that this deficit is a consequence of impaired reasoning skills. However, the possibility that such inflexibility affects the entire system of a patient's beliefs has rarely been empirically tested. Using delusion-neutral material in a well-documented advice-taking task, the present study reports that patients with schizophrenia: 1) revise their beliefs, 2) take into account socially provided information to do so, 3) are not overconfident about their judgments, and 4) show less egocentric advice-discounting than controls....
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attribu-tional style questionnaires and probabilis...
Background: The role of psychosis-related cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions) in a delusi...
Aims: As delusions have been associated with specific reasoning anomalies and cognitive behavioural ...
A variety of cognitive mechanisms have been proposed to apprehend the maintenance of delusional beli...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Background. It has been previously demonstrated that a cognitive bias against disconfirmatory eviden...
The present study aimed to investigate whether a brief reasoning training module changes the "jumpin...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
Cognitive-behaviour therapy 'cognitive-restructuring' techniques are explored as a method for modify...
The present study aimed to investigate whether a brief rea-soning training module changes the ‘‘jump...
Poster PresentationBACKGROUND: In previous work1 we observed, in chronic patients, that a generalize...
A clear challenge for schizophrenia research is to improve markedly the efficacy of psychological tr...
Objectives: New cognitive theories of delusions have proposed that deficit or bias in inference ...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attributional style questionnaires and probabilist...
There is now considerable evidence for reasoning, attention, metacognition and attribution biases in...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attribu-tional style questionnaires and probabilis...
Background: The role of psychosis-related cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions) in a delusi...
Aims: As delusions have been associated with specific reasoning anomalies and cognitive behavioural ...
A variety of cognitive mechanisms have been proposed to apprehend the maintenance of delusional beli...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Background. It has been previously demonstrated that a cognitive bias against disconfirmatory eviden...
The present study aimed to investigate whether a brief reasoning training module changes the "jumpin...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
Cognitive-behaviour therapy 'cognitive-restructuring' techniques are explored as a method for modify...
The present study aimed to investigate whether a brief rea-soning training module changes the ‘‘jump...
Poster PresentationBACKGROUND: In previous work1 we observed, in chronic patients, that a generalize...
A clear challenge for schizophrenia research is to improve markedly the efficacy of psychological tr...
Objectives: New cognitive theories of delusions have proposed that deficit or bias in inference ...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attributional style questionnaires and probabilist...
There is now considerable evidence for reasoning, attention, metacognition and attribution biases in...
Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attribu-tional style questionnaires and probabilis...
Background: The role of psychosis-related cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions) in a delusi...
Aims: As delusions have been associated with specific reasoning anomalies and cognitive behavioural ...