AI Article Synopsis

  • Jumping to conclusions is linked to delusions; however, the connection between positive schizotypy (delusion-like symptoms) and this behavior remains unclear.
  • Study participants, including individuals with high psychosis risk and controls, completed a task that measured their decision-making process through extreme responding and draws to decision, revealing that positive schizotypy correlated with extreme responding but not with the non-extreme trials.
  • The findings suggest that extreme responding represents a different cognitive bias compared to non-extreme responding, indicating potential implications for how jumping to conclusions is assessed and treated in individuals with positive schizotypy.

Article Abstract

Jumping to conclusions is associated with delusions. It is unclear whether positive schizotypy, which refers to delusion-like and hallucination-like symptoms, is associated with jumping to conclusions. Relatedly, the relative validity of two jumping to conclusions scores, extreme responding and draws to decision, is unclear, particularly whether extreme responding (responding after one or two draws) reflects the same bias as decreased draws to decision on non-extreme responding trials. Extreme positive schizotypy individuals with increased psychosis risk (= 69) and controls (= 95) completed the Probabilistic Reasoning Task and reported on recent distress, which was previously associated with jumping to conclusions. We calculated extreme responding, draws to decision (number of draws), and draws to decision/non-extreme responding (number of draws on trials with three or more draws). Positive schizotypy was associated with extreme responding, but not draws to decision/non-extreme responding. Furthermore, draws to decision and draws to decision/non-extreme responding were associated with recent distress, whereas extreme responding was not. Positive schizotypy was specifically associated with extreme responding and not draws to decision/non-extreme responding, which suggests that the nature of extreme responding and of draws to decision might be different. This could have relevance for assessing and treating jumping to conclusions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13546805.2019.1682984DOI Listing

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