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Schizophrenia, a term introduced by Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler in 1911, describes a severe psychological disorder marked by profound disruptions in attention, thought processes, language, emotion, and interpersonal relationships. The core feature of schizophrenia is psychosis — a state characterized by a fundamental detachment from reality. This disconnection manifests through distorted logic, impaired perception, and atypical behavior, severely affecting the lives of those...
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Schizophrenia is a complex mental health disorder that can manifest with various positive symptoms, including thought, movement, and behavior disorders. These symptoms significantly disrupt cognitive and motor functions, leading to profound effects on an individual's ability to engage with the world.
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Schizophrenia is a complex psychiatric disorder characterized by a range of symptoms that significantly impact cognition, behavior, and emotional regulation. Among these, the positive symptoms stand out as they involve the addition or exaggeration of normal mental functions, deviating markedly from typical behavior and perception. Hallucinations and delusions are prominent positive symptoms, each profoundly affecting the individual's experience of reality.
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Personality Disorders: Paranoid and Schizoid01:22

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Personality disorders represent enduring cognition, affect, and behavior patterns that significantly deviate from societal norms. These maladaptive traits often lead to difficulties in various domains, including interpersonal relationships, occupational settings, and overall psychological well-being. Paranoid personality disorder and schizoid personality disorder are two distinct conditions marked by odd or eccentric behavior.
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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Psychopathology Research
  • Neuroscience of Perception

Background:

  • Atypical time experiences are documented in schizophrenia.
  • Time perception anomalies in nonpsychotic schizotypy are understudied.
  • Schizotypy indicates a liability for schizophrenia spectrum disorders.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Investigate associations between schizotypy indicators and subjective time experience.
  • Focus on perceived speed of time.
  • Examine relations between Subjective Time Questionnaire subscales and schizotypal symptom domains (positive, negative, disorganized).

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a nonclinical university sample (N=682).
  • Administered measures of time perception and schizotypy.
  • Data collected between September 22, 2023, and December 4, 2023.

Main Results:

  • Found associations between schizotypy indicators and aberrant time perception.
  • Positive and disorganized schizotypal dimensions linked to extreme reports of time speeding up or slowing down.
  • Negative schizotypy associated with perceptions of time as expansive and slowed.

Conclusions:

  • Findings extend literature on time perception abnormalities in the schizophrenia spectrum.
  • Highlight the significance of studying subclinical schizotypy for understanding time anomalies.
  • Aberrant time perception is linked to specific dimensions of schizotypal symptomology.