The meaning of momentary psychotic-like experiences in a non-clinical sample: A personality perspective

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Abstract

The relationships between Momentary Psychotic-Like Experiences (MPLEs) and HEXACO —complemented by the proneness to PLEs conceptualized as a basic personality trait (Disintegration), and a maladaptive trait (PID-5 Psychoticism)—were investigated in a prospective study that includes experience-sampling methodology (ESM). The main goal was to investigate whether MPLEs are better predicted by HEXACO or measures of the dispositional proneness to PLEs. A sample of 180 participants assessed MPLEs and affective states they experienced in the previous two hours, twice per day, with semi-randomly set assessment time-points, during seven days, by using ESM. Personality inventories were administered 1–2 months earlier. MPLEs were better predicted by the measures of dispositional tendencies toward PLEs than by the HEXACO, no matter whether it was broadly defined as the nine-faceted general tendency toward PLEs (Disintegration), or narrowly as three-faceted positive psychotic-like symptoms of maladaptive personality tendencies (PID-5—Psychoticism).

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Knežević, G., Lazarević, L. B., & Zorić, A. (2022). The meaning of momentary psychotic-like experiences in a non-clinical sample: A personality perspective. PLoS ONE, 17(4 April). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0267054

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