The impact of religiosity, anxiety and depression on proneness to auditory hallucinations in healthy individuals.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Chiara Lucafò, Irene Ceccato, Gianluca Malatesta, Rocco Palumbo, Nicola Mammarella, Alberto Di Domenico, Luca Tommasi, Giulia Prete
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Abstract

Background: Auditory hallucinations (hearing voices in the absence of physical stimuli) are present in clinical conditions, but they are also experienced less frequently by healthy individuals. In the non-clinical population, auditory hallucinations are described more often as positive and not intrusive; indeed, they have received less attention.

Aims: The present study explores the phenomenology of non-clinical auditory hallucinations and their possible relationship with religiosity.

Method: Starting from previous findings suggesting that non-clinical auditory hallucinations are often described as a gift or a way to be connected with 'someone else', we administered standardised questionnaires to quantify proneness to experiencing auditory hallucinations, religiosity and anxiety/depression scores.

Results: Regression analysis carried out using an auditory hallucinations, index as the dependent variable on a final sample of 680 responders revealed that a total of 31% of the variance was explained by a five-steps model including demographic characteristics (i.e. being young, a woman and a non-believer) and negative (e.g. being afraid of otherworldly punishments) and positive (e.g. believing in benevolent supernatural forces) components of religiosity, anxiety and depression. Crucially, compared with believers, non-believers revealed higher scores in depression, anxiety and in a specific questionnaire measuring proneness to auditory hallucinations.

Conclusions: Results suggests that religiosity acts as a potential protective factor for proneness to paranormal experiences, but a complex relationship emerges between religious beliefs, mood alterations and unusual experiences.

Abstract Image

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健康个体的宗教信仰、焦虑和抑郁对幻听倾向的影响。
背景:幻听(在没有物理刺激的情况下听到声音)在临床条件下是存在的,但在健康个体中也不太常见。在非临床人群中,幻听通常被描述为积极而非侵入性的;事实上,他们受到的关注更少了。目的:本研究探讨非临床幻听的现象学及其与宗教信仰的可能关系。方法:根据之前的研究结果,非临床幻听经常被描述为一种礼物或一种与“他人”联系的方式,我们进行了标准化的问卷调查,以量化经历幻听的倾向、宗教信仰和焦虑/抑郁得分。结果:对680名应答者的最终样本进行回归分析,使用幻听指数作为因变量,结果显示,总共有31%的方差可以用五步模型来解释,该模型包括人口统计学特征(如年轻,女性和无信仰者)以及宗教信仰,焦虑和抑郁的消极(如害怕来世的惩罚)和积极(如相信仁慈的超自然力量)成分。至关重要的是,与信徒相比,非信徒在抑郁、焦虑和一项测量幻听倾向的特定问卷中得分更高。结论:研究结果表明,宗教信仰作为一种潜在的保护因素,对超自然经历的倾向起作用,但宗教信仰、情绪变化和不寻常经历之间存在复杂的关系。
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来源期刊
BJPsych Open
BJPsych Open Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
3.70%
发文量
610
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Announcing the launch of BJPsych Open, an exciting new open access online journal for the publication of all methodologically sound research in all fields of psychiatry and disciplines related to mental health. BJPsych Open will maintain the highest scientific, peer review, and ethical standards of the BJPsych, ensure rapid publication for authors whilst sharing research with no cost to the reader in the spirit of maximising dissemination and public engagement. Cascade submission from BJPsych to BJPsych Open is a new option for authors whose first priority is rapid online publication with the prestigious BJPsych brand. Authors will also retain copyright to their works under a creative commons license.
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