Author:
BAKER CAROLINE A.,MORRISON ANTHONY P.
Abstract
Background. Cognitive models suggest that auditory
hallucinations are experienced when mental
events are misattributed to an external source; therefore, this study was
designed to examine
attributional biases in patients experiencing auditory hallucinations.
The study also examined the role of metacognitive beliefs in the experience
of auditory
hallucinations, as some theories have
implicated metacognition in the development and maintenance of auditory
hallucinations.Methods. Fifteen participants with a diagnosis of
schizophrenia experiencing auditory
hallucinations were compared with 15 non-hallucinating schizophrenics and
15 non-psychiatric
control subjects on several measures, including an immediate source monitoring
task and a
questionnaire assessing metacognitive beliefs.Results. Results indicated that patients experiencing
hallucinations exhibited the predicted bias
towards misattributing internal events to an external source, as
measured by ratings of internality
of responses in a word association task. All groups had lower
perceived levels of internality and
control for emotionally salient words, which provides further evidence
for the importance of
emotional content in hallucinations. Patients experiencing
hallucinations were found to score higher
than the other two groups on metacognitive beliefs about uncontrollability
and danger and positive
beliefs about worry. In addition, a logistic regression analysis showed
that beliefs about
uncontrollability and danger were predictive of whether subjects
experienced auditory hallucinations or not.Conclusions. These results offer considerable support to
cognitive bias models of auditory
hallucinations, particularly those that implicate metacognition.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
166 articles.
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