Different sides of the same coin? Intercorrelations of cognitive biases in schizophrenia [0.03%]
一枚硬币的两面?精神分裂症的认知偏差之间的相互关联性研究
Steffen Moritz,Ruth Veckenstedt,Birgit Hottenrott et al.
Steffen Moritz et al.
Introduction: A number of cognitive biases have been associated with delusions in schizophrenia. It is yet unresolved whether these biases are independent or represent different sides of the same coin. ...
Is there a functional way of responding to paranoid intrusions? Development of the Reactions to Paranoid Thoughts Scale [0.03%]
应对妄想侵入的功能性反应方式有哪些?妄想思维反应量表的编制
Tania M Lincoln,Rebekka Reumann,Steffen Moritz
Tania M Lincoln
Introduction: Although many people experience paranoid thoughts occasionally, most do not develop clinically relevant paranoia, possibly due to a more functional way of responding. The aim of this study was to create a sc...
Laurent Lecardeur,Adrianna Mendrek,Emmanuel Stip
Laurent Lecardeur
Introduction: The aim of the present study was to compare spatial working memory performance of females and males schizophrenia patients to verify whether the sexual dimorphism of spatial abilities present in the general ...
Comparative Study
Cognitive neuropsychiatry. 2010 Jul;15(4):397-405. DOI:10.1080/13546800903399183 2010
Delusion and confabulation: overlapping or distinct distortions of reality? [0.03%]
谵妄与虚构:重叠还是不同的现实扭曲?
Robyn Langdon,Martha Turner
Robyn Langdon
Delusion is commonly defined as a false belief and associated with psychiatric illness like schizophrenia, whereas confabulation is typically described as a false memory and associated with neurological disorder like amnesia. Yet delusion a...
Martha Turner,Max Coltheart
Martha Turner
Confabulations and delusions both involve the production of false claims. Although they may have different types of content, they share several characteristics. For example, they are often held with considerable conviction and are resistant...
William Hirstein
William Hirstein
The patient with Capgras' syndrome claims that people very familiar to him have been replaced by impostors. I argue that this disorder is due to the destruction of a representation that the patient has of the mind of the familiar person. Th...
Max Coltheart,Peter Menzies,John Sutton
Max Coltheart
Delusional beliefs have sometimes been considered as rational inferences from abnormal experiences. We explore this idea in more detail, making the following points. First, the abnormalities of cognition that initially prompt the entertaini...
Confabulation, delusion, and anosognosia: motivational factors and false claims [0.03%]
诡辩、妄想和缺乏自知力:动力因素与伪证
Ryan McKay,Marcel Kinsbourne
Ryan McKay
False claims are a key feature of confabulation, delusion, and anosognosia. In this paper we consider the role of motivational factors in such claims. We review motivational accounts of each symptom and consider the evidence adduced in supp...
Insights from the examination of verbal and spatial memory errors in relation to clinical symptoms of patients with recent-onset schizophrenia [0.03%]
近期发病精神分裂症患者言语记忆与空间记忆错误的临床学分析
Caroline Cellard,Sébastien Tremblay,Andrée-Anne Lefébvre et al.
Caroline Cellard et al.
Introduction: Memory deficits in patients with schizophrenia (SZ) are considered as a key feature of the clinical manifestations of the disease. In order to further examine the role and nature of memory deficits in SZ, th...
Christoph Mensebach,Katja Wingenfeld,Martin Driessen et al.
Christoph Mensebach et al.
Introduction: Although emotional dysregulation is a core problem in borderline personality disorder (BPD), few neuropsychological studies have evaluated the impact of emotion. The present study aimed at the comprehensive ...