Temporal pathways from attachment insecurity to paranoia in a heterogeneous clinical sample: An experience sampling study

Author:

Dančík Daniel12ORCID,Hajdúk Michal123ORCID,Januška Jakub12ORCID,Straková Alexandra12ORCID,Heretik Anton12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts Comenius University Bratislava Bratislava Slovakia

2. The Centre for Psychiatric Disorders Research, Science Park Comenius University Bratislava Bratislava Slovakia

3. The Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine Comenius University Bratislava Bratislava Slovakia

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThere has been growing interest in the role of attachment mechanisms in the onset and maintenance of paranoia. The latest systematic reviews of mixed samples of healthy individuals and psychiatric patients have revealed that increased trait attachment anxiety and avoidance are associated with experiencing paranoia, with trait attachment anxiety showing a stronger association. Few studies have examined attachment and paranoia in naturalistic conditions via the Experience Sampling Method.ObjectivesThe present study examined whether experiences of attachment anxiety and avoidance fluctuate in the flow of daily life, and whether a within‐person change in both attachment states precedes the experience of momentary paranoia, and negative and positive emotions.MethodsThirty‐seven clinical participants and twenty‐six healthy controls were studied over six consecutive days using the Experience Sampling Method (ESM). An experience‐in‐close‐relationships questionnaire (ECR‐R 16 SF) was used to capture trait attachment dimensions. Several ESM items were used to capture momentary negative and positive affect, paranoia and attachment insecurity states.ResultsThe findings revealed that fluctuations in both attachment insecurity states were significantly higher in the clinical group. A prior elevated attachment anxiety and avoidance was followed by an increase in negative affect in the next moment and elevated attachment avoidance was additionally followed by a decrease in positive affect and an increase in paranoia.ConclusionOur findings reveal the specific temporal associations between momentary attachment insecurity states as predictors of change in emotions/affects and paranoia, along with evidence that state attachment avoidance has a superior impact on momentary affect and paranoia compared to state attachment anxiety. These results contrast with those of recent cross‐sectional studies.

Funder

Agentúra na Podporu Výskumu a Vývoja

Univerzita Komenského v Bratislave

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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