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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 23, 2026

Psychophysically-anchored, Robust Thresholding in Studying Pain-related Lateralization of Oscillatory Prestimulus Activity
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The persecution and deservedness scale.

Sara Melo1, Rhiannon Corcoran, Nick Shryane

  • 1The School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.

Psychology and Psychotherapy
|May 12, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new 10-item scale, the Persecution and Deservedness Scale (PaDS), reliably measures paranoid thinking and perceived persecution deservedness in clinical and non-clinical groups. Findings show differences in paranoia severity and deservedness across populations.

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Psychiatry
  • Clinical Psychology

Background:

  • Existing measures inadequately assess paranoid thinking severity and perceived deservedness of persecution.
  • There is a need for a brief, versatile tool for both clinical and non-clinical settings.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop and validate a concise scale measuring paranoid ideation and the perceived deservedness of persecution.
  • To assess the psychometric properties of the new scale in diverse populations.

Main Methods:

  • Study 1 involved selecting items for the Persecution and Deservedness Scale (PaDS) from UK and Portuguese undergraduate samples.
  • Study 2 compared psychometric properties of the PaDS between clinical participants (schizophrenia spectrum disorders) and a student sample.
  • Internal reliability and concurrent validity of the PaDS subscales (Persecution and Deservedness) were analyzed.

Main Results:

  • The 10-item PaDS demonstrated strong internal reliability and concurrent validity for its Persecution (P) subscale.
  • UK students scored higher on both P and Deservedness (D) than Portuguese students.
  • Clinical participants exhibited higher P scores but lower D scores compared to students.

Conclusions:

  • The PaDS is a reliable and valid brief measure for assessing paranoid thinking and perceived deservedness of persecution.
  • The scale is sensitive for use across clinical and non-clinical populations.
  • Paranoid thinking manifests as 'bad-me' in non-clinical groups and 'poor-me' in psychotic patients.