Impaired decision behavior of schizophrenia patients has been repeatedly observed. We investigated the aspects of the jumping to conclusions bias (JTC): biases in information-gathering, information weighting and integration, and overconfidence, using the process tracing paradigm Mouselab, which allows for an in-depth exploration of various decision-making processes in a structured information environment. Although showing less focused and systematic information search, patients practically considered all pieces of information and showed no JTC in the sense of collecting less pieces of evidence. Choices of patients and controls both approximated a rational solution quite well, but patients showed more extreme and, in view of the ambiguous na...
This pilot study of 20 chronically ill male inpatients with schizophrenia and a history of violence ...
ObjectivePrevious research has consistently shown that individuals with delusions typically exhibit ...
Introduction: There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias - ...
Impaired decision behavior of schizophrenia patients has been repeatedly observed. We investigated t...
Impaired decision behavior has been repeatedly observed in schizophrenia patients. We investigated s...
Several studies about schizophrenia have shown a cognitive bias named "Jumping to Conclusions" (JTC)...
Jumping to conclusions (JTC) is the best established cognitive bias in schizophrenia and is increasi...
Background. Patients with psychosis display the so-called 'Jumping to Conclusions' bias (JTC) - a te...
Background Jumping-to-conclusions (JTC) is a prominent reasoning bias in schizophrenia (SCZ). While ...
Objective. Several studies have provided evidence for the claim that a subgroup of (schizophrenic) p...
This study examined whether the probabilistic reasoning bias referred to as a "jumping-to-conclusion...
This study investigated the effects of the bias known as jumping to conclusions (JTC) on objective f...
Research suggests that a jumping-to-conclusions (JTC) bias, excessive intuition, and reduced analysi...
The “jumping to conclusion” (JTC) bias is related to the formation and maintenance of delusions. Hig...
IntroductionPatients with delusions typically seek less information when making decisions than contr...
This pilot study of 20 chronically ill male inpatients with schizophrenia and a history of violence ...
ObjectivePrevious research has consistently shown that individuals with delusions typically exhibit ...
Introduction: There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias - ...
Impaired decision behavior of schizophrenia patients has been repeatedly observed. We investigated t...
Impaired decision behavior has been repeatedly observed in schizophrenia patients. We investigated s...
Several studies about schizophrenia have shown a cognitive bias named "Jumping to Conclusions" (JTC)...
Jumping to conclusions (JTC) is the best established cognitive bias in schizophrenia and is increasi...
Background. Patients with psychosis display the so-called 'Jumping to Conclusions' bias (JTC) - a te...
Background Jumping-to-conclusions (JTC) is a prominent reasoning bias in schizophrenia (SCZ). While ...
Objective. Several studies have provided evidence for the claim that a subgroup of (schizophrenic) p...
This study examined whether the probabilistic reasoning bias referred to as a "jumping-to-conclusion...
This study investigated the effects of the bias known as jumping to conclusions (JTC) on objective f...
Research suggests that a jumping-to-conclusions (JTC) bias, excessive intuition, and reduced analysi...
The “jumping to conclusion” (JTC) bias is related to the formation and maintenance of delusions. Hig...
IntroductionPatients with delusions typically seek less information when making decisions than contr...
This pilot study of 20 chronically ill male inpatients with schizophrenia and a history of violence ...
ObjectivePrevious research has consistently shown that individuals with delusions typically exhibit ...
Introduction: There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias - ...