Sex differences in wisconsin schizotypy scales-a meta-analysis

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Abstract

Previous single studies have found inconsistent results on sex differences in positive schizotypy, women scoring mainly higher than men, whereas in negative schizotypy studies have often found that men score higher than women. However, information on the overall effect is unknown. In this study, meta-analytic methods were used to estimate sex differences in Wisconsin Schizotypy Scales developed to measure schizotypal traits and psychosis proneness. We also studied the effect of the sample characteristics on possible differences. Studies on healthy populations were extensively collected; the required minimum sample size was 50. According to the results, men scored higher on the scales of negative schizotypy, ie, in the Physical Anhedonia Scale (n=23 studies, effect size, Cohen d=0.59, z test P

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Miettunen, J., & Jääskeläinen, E. (2010). Sex differences in wisconsin schizotypy scales-a meta-analysis. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 36(2), 347–358. https://doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbn075

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