JOURNAL ARTICLE

Thoughts Falling Apart: Disorganized Schizotypy Specifically Predicts Both Psychotic‐ and Stress‐Reactivity in Daily Life

Levente RónaiFlóra HannSzabolcs KériBertalan Polner

Year: 2025 Journal:   Journal of Personality Vol: 94 (1)Pages: 94-108   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective Schizotypal personality traits, such as unusual experiences, odd beliefs, or social anhedonia, predict psychotic‐like experiences (PLEs) and heightened stress‐reactivity in daily life. Yet, in previous studies, stressor appraisal, but not exposure , was used to predict stress‐reactivity, which might be a consequence of behavioral sensitization rather than a valid predictor of it. Method We conducted an experience sampling study where 126 participants reported PLEs, event appraisals, and exposure to stressors, yielding 4611 observations. We tested the association of schizotypal traits with PLEs and event‐unpleasantness in interaction with stressor exposure. Results Disorganized (but not positive or negative) schizotypy predicted not only more intense PLEs but also higher PLEs in periods when stressor exposure had risen. However, in higher negative schizotypy, such PLE‐reactivity to stressors was reversed. Moreover, individuals with higher disorganization found events more unpleasant overall, and for them, being exposed to more stressors was related to a steeper rise in appraising events as unpleasant. Conclusions Disorganization, but not positive or negative schizotypy, might be a specific determinant of stressor‐related increases in PLEs and negative event appraisal in everyday life in the general population. This supports that disorganized personality might be a critical predictor of vulnerability to stress‐related mental health impairments.

Keywords:
Schizotypy Psychology Stressor Anhedonia Clinical psychology Personality Developmental psychology Experience sampling method Reactivity (psychology) Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) Psychiatry Social psychology Medicine

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0.86
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Citation History

Topics

Mental Health Research Topics
Social Sciences →  Psychology →  Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Schizophrenia research and treatment
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Psychiatry and Mental health
Mental Health and Psychiatry
Social Sciences →  Arts and Humanities →  Philosophy
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