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Schizotypy in adolescence: the role of gender and age

Authors :
José Muñiz
Eduardo Fonseca-Pedrero
Ángela Campillo-Álvarez
Eduardo García-Cueto
Serafín Lemos-Giráldez
Source :
The Journal of nervous and mental disease. 196(2)
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Schizotypy is a multidimensional personality construct that appears to indicate psychosis proneness. Supposedly, schizotypal traits behave differently depending on a person's age and gender, but few studies have examined this relationship. In our study we used the Thinking and Perceptual Style Questionnaire and the Junior Schizotypy Scales. The sample was made up of 321 students (169 males) with an age range of 12 to 17 years. The results show significant differences in gender and age groups. Males score higher than females on Physical Anhedonia, Social Anhedonia, and Impulsive Non-Conformity scales, while females score higher or Positive Symptoms, Negative Evaluation, and Social Paranoia scales. Significant differences were also found among age groups: Unusual experiences, self-referent ideation, social paranoia, thought disorder, and negative evaluation were more frequent in later stages of adolescence. However, the meaning of this difference could be interpreted in terms of emotional turbulence rather than as a direct indicator of vulnerability to psychosis.

Details

ISSN :
1539736X
Volume :
196
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of nervous and mental disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....48db8f9fd04955b4c27a50a91afd3847