Background: Contemporary models of psychosis implicate the importance of affective dysregulation and cognitive factors (e.g. biases and schemas) in the development and maintenance of psychotic symptoms, but studies testing proposed mechanisms remain limited. This study, uniquely using a prospective design, investigated whether the jumping to conclusions (JTC) reasoning bias contributes to psychosis progression and persistence. Methods: Data were derived from the second Netherlands Mental Health Survey and Incidence Study (NEMESIS-2). The Composite International Diagnostic Interview and an add-on instrument were used to assess affective dysregulation (i.e. depression, anxiety and mania) and psychotic experiences (PEs), respectively. The bead...
Understanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refinement of ...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Background: Cognitive biases may contribute to delusion persistence. We tested this in a longitudina...
Background: Contemporary models of psychosis implicate the importance of affective dysregulation and...
Background Contemporary models of psychosis implicate the importance of affective dysregulation and ...
Background. Psychosis is associated with a reasoning bias, which manifests as a tendency to 'jump to...
BACKGROUND: The jumping to conclusions (JTC) reasoning bias and decreased working memory performance...
BackgroundThe 'jumping to conclusions' (JTC) bias is associated with both psychosis and general cogn...
BackgroundThe 'jumping to conclusions' (JTC) bias is associated with both psychosis and general cogn...
This study examined whether the probabilistic reasoning bias referred to as a "jumping-to-conclusion...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
Background. Patients with psychosis display the so-called 'Jumping to Conclusions' bias (JTC) - a te...
Understanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refinement of ...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Background: Cognitive biases may contribute to delusion persistence. We tested this in a longitudina...
Background: Contemporary models of psychosis implicate the importance of affective dysregulation and...
Background Contemporary models of psychosis implicate the importance of affective dysregulation and ...
Background. Psychosis is associated with a reasoning bias, which manifests as a tendency to 'jump to...
BACKGROUND: The jumping to conclusions (JTC) reasoning bias and decreased working memory performance...
BackgroundThe 'jumping to conclusions' (JTC) bias is associated with both psychosis and general cogn...
BackgroundThe 'jumping to conclusions' (JTC) bias is associated with both psychosis and general cogn...
This study examined whether the probabilistic reasoning bias referred to as a "jumping-to-conclusion...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
Background. Patients with psychosis display the so-called 'Jumping to Conclusions' bias (JTC) - a te...
Understanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refinement of ...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Background: Cognitive biases may contribute to delusion persistence. We tested this in a longitudina...