Psychosis proneness, loneliness, and hallucinations in nonclinical individuals

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Abstract

Hallucinations occur along a continuum of normal functioning. Investigating the factors related to this experience in nonclinical individuals may offer important information for understanding the etiology of hallucinations in psychiatric populations. In this study we test the relationship between psychosis proneness, loneliness, and auditory hallucinations in a nonclinical sample using the White Christmas paradigm. Seventy-six undergraduate students participated in this study. We found that slightly more than half of our participants endorsed a hallucinatory experience during the White Christmas paradigm. However, we did not observe a relationship between the number of hallucinatory experiences and schizotypy, propensity to hallucinate, or loneliness. Moreover, there were no differences on these measures between individuals who reported hearing a hallucination during the White Christmas paradigm relative to those who did not. Thus, there may be other contextual factors not investigated in this study that might clarify the mechanism by which auditory hallucinations are experienced in a nonclinical population.

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Lincoln, S. H., Johnson, T., Kim, S., Edenbaum, E., & Hooley, J. M. (2021). Psychosis proneness, loneliness, and hallucinations in nonclinical individuals. PLoS ONE, 16(5 May). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251753

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