2020
The jumping to conclusions reasoning bias as a cognitive factor contributing to psychosis progression and persistence: findings from NEMESIS-2
Rauschenberg C, Reininghaus U, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Simons C, Gunther N, Henquet C, Pries L, Guloksuz S, Bak M, van Os J. The jumping to conclusions reasoning bias as a cognitive factor contributing to psychosis progression and persistence: findings from NEMESIS-2. Psychological Medicine 2020, 51: 1696-1703. PMID: 32174291, PMCID: PMC8327623, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291720000446.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsJTC biasAffective dysregulationCognitive factorsPsychotic experiencesSecond Netherlands Mental Health SurveyConclusions reasoning biasProspective design
2018
Reasoning bias, working memory performance and a transdiagnostic phenotype of affective disturbances and psychotic experiences in the general population
Reininghaus U, Rauschenberg C, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Simons CJP, Gunther N, Pries LK, Guloksuz S, Radhakrishnan R, Bak M, van Os J. Reasoning bias, working memory performance and a transdiagnostic phenotype of affective disturbances and psychotic experiences in the general population. Psychological Medicine 2018, 49: 1799-1809. PMID: 30160228, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291718002209.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsComposite International Diagnostic InterviewAffective disturbancesPsychotic experiencesNetherlands Mental Health SurveySecond Netherlands Mental Health SurveyTransdiagnostic phenotypeJTC biasMental Health SurveyDose-response relationshipGeneral population sampleHealth SurveyGeneral populationIncidence studyHelp-seeking behaviorDiagnostic InterviewTime pointsMemory performanceConclusions reasoning biasPopulation sampleRecent findingsPhenotypeDigit span taskIndividualsFindingsPsychosis