社会失败和精神病相关的结果:与失败的性质、结果的特异性和精神病倾向相关的联想和实验测试

Bridget Shovestul , Mars Scharf , Gloria Liu , David Dodell-Feder
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引用次数: 0

摘要

几种形式的社会失败,包括排斥、歧视、欺凌和相关经历,都与精神障碍和经历有关。精神分裂症的社会失败假说试图通过假设由于具有局外人身份而导致的慢性排斥会导致有害的神经生物学变化,从而产生精神病来解释这些关联。在这里,我们测试了这一理论的非神经生物学原理,包括日常、现实世界中的慢性社交失败与急性、有时间限制的、实验诱导的社交失败体验(社会排斥)的相对影响,精神病倾向性的调节作用,以及社交失败对精神病相关结果的特异性。我们发现,现实世界中的、慢性但非急性的、有时间限制的、基于实验室的社交失败与信任度下降有关,但与听觉信号检测任务的假警报无关。这些关联是通过符合社会重新连接的互动(即排斥后对社会刺激的积极评价)来限定的。在现实世界中,长期的社交失败也与妄想和幻觉倾向有关。总之,这些数据强调了日常、现实世界形式的社会失败与实验室操作对特定精神病相关结果的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social defeat and psychosis-related outcomes: Associative and experimental tests related to the nature of defeat, specificity of outcomes, and psychosis-proneness

Several forms of social defeat, including ostracism, discrimination, bullying, and related experiences, have been associated with psychotic disorders and experiences. The social defeat hypothesis of schizophrenia attempts to explain these associations by positing that chronic exclusion due to having outsider status leads to deleterious neurobiological changes that produce psychosis. Here, we test non-neurobiological tenets of this theory, including the relative impact of daily, real-world, chronic social defeat versus an acute, time-limited, experimentally-induced socially defeating experience (social exclusion), the moderating role of psychosis-proneness, and the specificity of social defeat on psychosis-related outcomes. We find that real-world, chronic, but not acute, time-limited, laboratory-based social defeat is associated with decreased trust, but not false-alarms on an auditory signal detection task. These associations were qualified by interactions that are in line with social reconnection (i.e., positive appraisals of social stimuli following exclusion). Real-world, chronic social defeat was also associated with delusion- and hallucination-proneness. Together, these data highlight the importance of daily, real-world forms of social defeat versus laboratory manipulations on specific psychosis-related outcomes.

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来源期刊
Psychiatry research communications
Psychiatry research communications Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
1.40
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77 days
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