AbstractPatients with delusions exhibit an increased tendency to arrive at decisions based on very limited evidence (jumping-to-conclusions; JTC), making this reasoning bias relevant for the treatment of delusions. Neurocognitive deficits contribute to JTC, but it is not known whether this has any bearing on the clinical syndrome of delusions. We addressed this question by reanalyzing data from an efficacy study of non-pharmacological interventions as adjunctive treatments in schizophrenia. We investigated the longitudinal associations of cognitive functioning, JTC and delusions in patients with psychotic disorders receiving either a metacognitive intervention addressing reasoning biases (n=59), or cognitive remediation (n=58). Both interve...
Background. Persecutory delusions are a key psychotic experience. A reasoning style known as ‘jumpin...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESIS: In a complex world, gathering information and adjusting our beliefs about...
Patients with delusions exhibit an increased tendency to arrive at decisions based on very limited e...
AbstractPatients with delusions exhibit an increased tendency to arrive at decisions based on very l...
AbstractBackgroundIt has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to con...
BACKGROUND: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Understanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refinement of ...
Introduction: There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias - ...
AbstractUnderstanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refine...
The “jumping to conclusion” (JTC) bias is related to the formation and maintenance of delusions. Hig...
Background: Cognitive biases may contribute to delusion persistence. We tested this in a longitudina...
We did a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate the magnitude and specificity of the “ju...
Background. Persecutory delusions are a key psychotic experience. A reasoning style known as ‘jumpin...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESIS: In a complex world, gathering information and adjusting our beliefs about...
Patients with delusions exhibit an increased tendency to arrive at decisions based on very limited e...
AbstractPatients with delusions exhibit an increased tendency to arrive at decisions based on very l...
AbstractBackgroundIt has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to con...
BACKGROUND: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Background: It has been consistently demonstrated that delusions are related to jumping to conclusio...
Cognitive approaches to the study of delusional beliefs have been the focus of much research over th...
Understanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refinement of ...
Introduction: There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias - ...
AbstractUnderstanding how people with delusions arrive at false conclusions is central to the refine...
The “jumping to conclusion” (JTC) bias is related to the formation and maintenance of delusions. Hig...
Background: Cognitive biases may contribute to delusion persistence. We tested this in a longitudina...
We did a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate the magnitude and specificity of the “ju...
Background. Persecutory delusions are a key psychotic experience. A reasoning style known as ‘jumpin...
Two reasoning biases, jumping to conclusions (JTC) and belief inflexibility, have been found to be a...
BACKGROUND AND HYPOTHESIS: In a complex world, gathering information and adjusting our beliefs about...