Abstract
Within non-clinical samples the relationship between paranormal belief (PB) and well-being varies as a function of level of psychopathology. Accordingly, believers are best conceptualised as a heterogeneous set of sub-groups. The usefulness of previous findings has been restricted by conceptual methodological limitations. Specifically, overreliance on cross-sectional design, the assumption that believers constitute a homogeneous group, and consideration of direct effects. Acknowledging these limitations, the present study investigated whether profile membership derived from PB and psychopathology (schizotypy and manic-depressive experience) predicted well-being (i.e., stress, somatic complaints, life satisfaction and meaning in life) across time. Concurrently, analysis assessed the mediating effect of theoretically important variables (transliminality, happiness orientation, fearful and skeptical attitude). A sample of 1736 (Mage = 52, range = 18 to 88; 883 females, 845 males, eight non-binary) completed self-report measures indexing study constructs across time points. Latent profile analysis at baseline, identified three sub-groups varying in level of PB and psychopathology at baseline: Profile 1, moderate PB and high psychopathology; Profile 2, moderate PB and psychopathology; and Profile 3, moderate PB and low psychopathology. Path analysis demonstrated that Profile 1 (the highest psychopathology scoring profile) predicted higher negative and lower positive well-being over time in comparison with the other profiles. Moreover, Transliminality and Fearful Attitude positively mediated this relationship, whereas Skeptical Attitude produced negative mediation. These outcomes supported the presence of a sophisticated process underpinning the PB and well-being relationship. Overall, PB in the absence of psychopathology had no significant influence on well-being.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference102 articles.
1. Paranormal experience, belief in the paranormal and anomalous beliefs;NA Dagnall;Paranthropology: Journal of Anthropological Approaches to the Paranormal,2016
2. Paranormal belief and well-being: The moderating roles of transliminality and psychopathology-related facets;N Dagnall;Frontiers in Psychology,2022
3. Reducing pseudoscientific and paranormal beliefs in university students through a course in science and critical thinking;JA Wilson;Science & Education,2018
4. The relationship between paranormal belief and psychopathology with special focus on magical ideation, psychosis, and schizotypy;MA Thalbourne;Australian Journal of Parapsychology,2019
5. Group differences in internet superstition: Negative relationship with neuroticism.;J Liu;Personality and Individual Differences,2021
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献