51. Associations of hallucination proneness with free-recall intrusions and response bias in a nonclinical sample.
- Author
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Brébion G, Larøi F, and Van der Linden M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Regression Analysis, Semantics, Verbal Behavior physiology, Vocabulary, Young Adult, Bias, Hallucinations psychology, Mental Recall physiology, Recognition, Psychology physiology
- Abstract
Background: Hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia have been associated with a liberal response bias in signal detection and recognition tasks and with various types of source-memory error. We investigated the associations of hallucination proneness with free-recall intrusions and false recognitions of words in a nonclinical sample., Method: A total of 81 healthy individuals were administered a verbal memory task involving free recall and recognition of one nonorganizable and one semantically organizable list of words. Hallucination proneness was assessed by means of a self-rating scale., Results: Global hallucination proneness was associated with free-recall intrusions in the nonorganizable list and with a response bias reflecting tendency to make false recognitions of nontarget words in both types of list. The verbal hallucination score was associated with more intrusions and with a reduced tendency to make false recognitions of words., Conclusions: The associations between global hallucination proneness and two types of verbal memory error in a nonclinical sample corroborate those observed in patients with schizophrenia and suggest that common cognitive mechanisms underlie hallucinations in psychiatric and nonclinical individuals.
- Published
- 2010
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