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Correlates of Hallucinatory Experiences in the General Population: An International Multisite Replication Study
Author(s) -
Peter Moseley,
André Alemán,
Paul Allen,
Vaughan Bell,
Josef J. Bless,
Catherine Bortolon,
Matteo Cella,
Jane Garrison,
Kenneth Hugdahl,
Eva Kozáková,
Frank Larøi,
Jamie Moffatt,
Nicolas Say,
David Smailes,
Mimi Suzuki,
Wei Lin Toh,
Todd S. Woodward,
Yuliya Zaytseva,
Susan L. Rossell,
Charles Fernyhough
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
psychological science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.641
H-Index - 260
eISSN - 1467-9280
pISSN - 0956-7976
DOI - 10.1177/0956797620985832
Subject(s) - psychology , cognition , population , dichotic listening , clinical psychology , active listening , developmental psychology , memory span , cognitive psychology , audiology , psychiatry , working memory , neuroscience , psychotherapist , medicine , environmental health
Hallucinatory experiences can occur in both clinical and nonclinical groups. However, in previous studies of the general population, investigations of the cognitive mechanisms underlying hallucinatory experiences have yielded inconsistent results. We ran a large-scale preregistered multisite study, in which general-population participants ( N = 1,394 across 11 data-collection sites and online) completed assessments of hallucinatory experiences, a measure of adverse childhood experiences, and four tasks: source memory, dichotic listening, backward digit span, and auditory signal detection. We found that hallucinatory experiences were associated with a higher false-alarm rate on the signal detection task and a greater number of reported adverse childhood experiences but not with any of the other cognitive measures employed. These findings are an important step in improving reproducibility in hallucinations research and suggest that the replicability of some findings regarding cognition in clinical samples needs to be investigated.

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