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Immersion in altered experience: An investigation of the relationship between absorption and psychopathology. | LitMetric

Immersion in altered experience: An investigation of the relationship between absorption and psychopathology.

Conscious Cogn

University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Psychiatry, 1601 W. Taylor St., Chicago, IL 60612, United States; Jesse Brown Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 820 South Damen Avenue, Chicago, IL 60612, United States.

Published: March 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding perceptual changes in psychosis can lead to better early detection and monitoring of symptoms before they worsen.
  • Participants with psychotic disorders demonstrated significantly higher levels of absorption compared to those without psychosis, with absorption linked to various hallucinations and delusions.
  • The research identified two clusters regarding self-disturbance: one with weakened ego boundaries and another with stable ego boundaries, highlighting absorption as a key factor in understanding psychosis that has not been thoroughly explored.

Article Abstract

Understanding alterations in perceptual experiences as a component of the basic symptom structure of psychosis may improve early detection and the identification of subtle shifts that can precede symptom onset or exacerbation. We explored the phenomenological construct of absorption and psychotic experiences in both clinical (bipolar psychosis and schizophrenia spectrum) and non-clinical participants. Participants with psychosis endorsed significantly higher absorption compared to the non-clinical group. Absorption was positively correlated with all types of hallucinations and multiple types of delusions. The analysis yielded two distinct cluster groups that demarcated a distinction along the continuum of self-disturbance: on characterized by attenuated ego boundaries and the other stable ego boundaries. The study suggests that absorption is a potentially important but under-researched component of psychosis that overlaps with, but is not identical to the more heavily theorized constructs of aberrant salience and hyperreflexivity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5358520PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2017.01.015DOI Listing

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