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Mediating role of cognitive biases, resilience and depressive symptoms in the relationship between childhood trauma and psychotic‐like experiences in young adults
Author(s) -
Mętel Dagmara,
Arciszewska Aleksandra,
Daren Artur,
Pionke Renata,
Cechnicki Andrzej,
Frydecka Dorota,
Gawęda Łukasz
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
early intervention in psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.087
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1751-7893
pISSN - 1751-7885
DOI - 10.1111/eip.12829
Subject(s) - psychology , psychological resilience , psychopathology , clinical psychology , cognition , mediation , population , depressive symptoms , psychological intervention , psychiatry , medicine , psychotherapist , environmental health , political science , law
Objectives The present study aimed to test a hypothetical model where causally linked and ordered cognitive biases, resilience and depressive symptoms serve as mediators of the relationship between early traumatic life events and psychotic‐like experiences (PLEs) in the general population of young adults. Methods Two thousand six hundred and fourteen people (1673 females) took part in the online survey. Participants completed self‐report questionnaires measuring exposure to early traumatic life events, PLEs, cognitive biases, resilience and depressive symptoms. Correlation and multiple mediation analyses were performed. Results All three mediators turned out to be significantly correlated with early trauma, PLEs and with each other. Mediational analysis demonstrated that hypothesized model of causally linked mediators was significant ( P  ≤ .001) and accounted for 33% ( P  < .001) of the explained variance in PLEs in comparison to 11% ( P  ≤ .001) without mediators. Conclusions First, our results provide evidence for significant associations between early traumatic life events, cognitive biases, depressive symptoms, psychological resilience and PLEs. Second, they indicate significant indirect effects of early trauma exposure on PLEs through a path consisted of cognitive biases, psychological resilience and depressive symptoms that suggest a possible importance of interventions bolstering resilience in young people in order to minimize the severity of depressive and psychotic psychopathology.

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