Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

From adversity to psychosis: pathways and mechanisms from specific adversities to specific symptoms

  • Invited Reviews
  • Published:
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Purpose

Although there is considerable evidence that adversities in childhood such as social deprivation, sexual abuse, separation from parents, neglect and exposure to deviant parental communication are associated with psychosis in later life, most studies have considered broad diagnoses as outcomes. In this review we consider evidence for pathways between specific types of adversity and specific symptoms of psychosis.

Methods

We present theoretical arguments for expecting some degree of specificity (although by no means perfect specificity) between different kinds of adversity and different symptoms of psychosis. We review studies that have investigated social–environmental risk factors for thought disorder, auditory–verbal hallucinations and paranoid delusions, and consider how these risk factors may impact on specific psychological and biological mechanisms.

Results

Communication deviance in parents has been implicated in the development of thought disorder in offspring, childhood sexual abuse has been particularly implicated in auditory–verbal hallucinations, and attachment-disrupting events (e.g. neglect, being brought up in an institution) may have particular potency for the development of paranoid symptoms. Current research on psychological mechanisms underlying these symptoms suggests a number of symptom-specific mechanisms that may explain these associations.

Conclusions

Few studies have considered symptoms, underlying mechanisms and different kinds of adversity at the same time. Future research along these lines will have the potential to elucidate the mechanisms that lead to severe mental illness, and may have considerable clinical implications.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Institutional subscriptions

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  1. de Sousa P et al (2013) Parental communication deviance and psychosis: a meta-analysis. Schizophr Bull, 1–13. doi:10.1093/schbul/sbt088

  2. Varese F et al (2012) Childhood adversities increase the risk of psychosis: a meta-analysis of patient-control, prospective and cross-sectional cohort studies. Schizophr Bull 38:661–671

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  3. Cantor-Graee E, Selten JP (2005) Schizophrenia and migration: a meta-analysis and review. Am J Psychiatry 163:478–487

    Google Scholar 

  4. Vassos E et al (2012) Meta-analysis of the association of urbanicity with schizophrenia. Schizophr Bull 38:1118–1123

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  5. Beards S et al (2013) Life events and psychosis: a review and meta-analysis. Schizophr Bull 39(4):740–747

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  6. Morgan C et al (2014) Modelling the interplay between childhood and adult adversity in pathways to psychosis: initial evidence from the AESOP study. Psychol Med 44(2):407–419

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  7. Wahlberg K-E et al (1997) Gene-environment interaction in vulnerability to schizophrenia: findings from the Finnish Adoptive Family Study of Schizophrenia. Am J Psychiatry 154:355–362

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  8. Wicks S, Hjern A, Daman C (2010) Social risk or genetic liability for psychosis? A study of children born in Sweden and reared by adoptive parents. Am J Psychiatry 167:1240–1246

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  9. Alemany S et al (2013) Childhood adversity and psychosis: examining whether the association is due to genetic confounding using a monozygotic twin differences approach. Eur Psychiatry 28:207–212

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  10. Shevlin M, Dorahy M, Adamson G (2007) Childhood traumas and hallucinations: an analysis of the National Comorbidity Survey. J Psychiatr Res 41:222–228

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Wynne LC et al (1977) Schizophrenics and their families: research on parental communication. In: Tanner JM (ed) Developments in psychiatric research. Hodder & Stoughton, London

    Google Scholar 

  12. Hill AB (1965) The environment and disease: association or causation? Proc R Soc Med 58:295–300

    CAS  PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  13. Bentall RP et al (2012) Do specific early life adversities lead to specific symptoms of psychosis? A study from the 2007 The Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey. Schizophr Bull 38:734–740

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  14. Khuder SA (2001) Effects of cigarette smoking on major histological types of lung cancer: a meta-analysis. Lung Cancer 31:139–148

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  15. Selten J-P, Cantor-Graae E (2005) Social defeat: risk factor for psychosis? Br J Psychiatry 187:101–102

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  16. Kelleher I et al (2013) Childhood trauma and psychosis in a prospective cohort study: cause, effect and directionality. Am J Psychiatry 170:734–741

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  17. Howes OD, Murray RM (2013) Schizophrenia: an integrated sociodevelopmental-cognitive model. Lancet 383:1677–1687

  18. Read J et al (2001) A traumagenic neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia. Psychiatry Interpers Biol Process 64:319–345

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  19. Read J et al (2014) The traumagenic neurodevelopmental model of psychosis revisited. Neuropsychiatry 4:65–79

    Google Scholar 

  20. Bentall RP (2003) Madness explained: psychosis and human nature. Penguin, London

    Google Scholar 

  21. Krueger R (1999) The structure of common mental disorders. Arch Gen Psychiatry 56:921–926

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  22. Kessler RC et al (2011) Development of lifetime comorbidity in the World Health Organization world mental health surveys. Arch Gen Psychiatry 68(1):90–100

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  23. Kotov R et al (2011) Schizophrenia in the internalizing–externalizing framework: a third dimension? Schizophr Bull 37(6):1168–1178

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  24. Liddle PF (1987) The symptoms of chronic schizophrenia: a reexamination of the positive–negative dichotomy. Br J Psychiatry 151:145–151

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  25. Demjaha A et al (2009) Combining dimensional and categorical representation of psychosis: the way forward for DSM-V and ICD-11? Psychol Med 39(12):1943–1955

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  26. van Os J, Kapur S (2009) Schizophrenia. Lancet 374:635–645

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  27. Caspi A et al (2014) The p factor: one general psychopathology factor in the structure of psychiatric disorders? Clin Psychol Sci 2:119–137

  28. Reininghaus U, Priebe S, Bentall RP (2013) Testing the psychopathology of psychosis: evidence for a general psychosis dimension. Schizophr Bull 39:884–895

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  29. Borsboom D, Cramer AOJ (2013) Network analysis: an integrative approach to the structure of psychopathology. Annu Rev Clin Psychol 9:91–121

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  30. Cicchetti D, Barnett D (1991) Attachment organization in maltreated pre-schoolers. Dev Psychopathol 3:397–411

    Google Scholar 

  31. Briere J (1990) Differential adult symptomatology associated with three types of child abuse histories. Child Abuse Negl 14:357–364

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  32. Gibb BE (2002) Childhood maltreatment and negative cognitive styles: a quantitative and qualitative review. Clin Psychol Rev 22:223–246

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  33. Spasojević J, Alloy LB (2002) Who Becomes a depressive ruminator? Developmental antecedents of ruminative response style. J Cognit Psychotherapy 16:405–419

    Google Scholar 

  34. van Ijzendoorn MH, Schuengel C (1996) The measurement of dissociation in normal and clinical populations: meta-analytic validation of the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES). Clin Psychol Rev 16:365–382

    Google Scholar 

  35. Griffin MG, Resick PA, Mechanic MB (1997) Objective assessment of peritraumatic dissociation: psychophysiological indicators. Am J Psychiatry 154:1081–1088

    CAS  PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  36. van Der Kolk BA, Fisler R (1995) Dissociation and the fragmentary nature of traumatic memories: overview and exploratory study. J Trauma Stress 8:505–525

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  37. Bowlby J (1965) Childcare and the growth of love, 2nd edn. Penguin, Harmondsworth

    Google Scholar 

  38. Gibson JJ (1971) On hallucination and perception. Leonardo 4:405–412

    Google Scholar 

  39. Shevlin M et al (2013) Patterns of lifetime female victimisation and psychotic experiences: a study based on the UK Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey 2007. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 48:15–24

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  40. Maniglio R (2013) Prevalence of child sexual abuse among adults and youths with bipolar disorder: a systematic review. Clin Psychol Rev 33:561–573

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  41. Swinnen SGHA, Selten JP (2007) Mood disorders and migration: meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 190:6–10

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  42. Wan JL (2004) Rural–urban differences in the prevalence of major depression and associated impairment. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 39:19–25

    Google Scholar 

  43. Sherazi R et al (2006) What’s new: the clinical epidemiology of bipolar disorder. Harvard Rev Psychiatry 14:274–284

    Google Scholar 

  44. Kaymaz N et al (2006) Evidence that the urban environment specifically impacts on the psychotic but not the affective dimension of bipolar disorder. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 41:679–685

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  45. van Os J et al (2001) Prevalence of psychotic disorder and community level of psychotic symptoms: an urban-rural comparison. Arch Gen Psychiatry 58:663–668

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  46. Singer MT, Wynne LC (1965) Thought disorder and family relations of schizophrenics IV. Results and implications. Arch Gen Psychiatry 12:201–212

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  47. Harrow M, Quinlan DM (1985) Disordered thinking and schizophrenic psychopathology. Gardner Press, New York

    Google Scholar 

  48. Sass LA et al (1984) Parental communication deviance and forms of thinking in male schizophrenic offspring. J Nerv Mental Dis 172:513–520

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  49. Tompson MC et al (2007) Children with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders: thought disorder and communication problems in a family interactional context. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 38:421–429

    Google Scholar 

  50. Velligan DI et al (1997) Longitudinal analysis of communication deviance in the families of schizophrenic patients. Psychiatry 58:6–19

    Google Scholar 

  51. Levy DL et al (2010) The genetic basis of thought disorder and language and communication disturbances in schizophrenia. J Neurolinguist 23:176–192

    Google Scholar 

  52. Wahlberg KE et al (2000) Thought disorder index of Finnish adoptees and communication deviance of their adoptive parents. Psychol Med 30:127–136

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  53. Read J, Argyle N (1999) Hallucinations, delusions, and thought disorder among psychiatric patients with a history of child abuse. Psychiatr Services 50:1467–1472

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  54. Hammersley P et al (2003) Childhood trauma and hallucinations in bipolar affective disorder: a preliminary investigation. Br J Psychiatry 182:543–547

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  55. Sommer IE et al (2012) The treatment of hallucinations in schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Schizophr Bull 38:704–714

  56. Mirowsky J, Ross CE (1983) Paranoia and the structure of powerlessness. Am Sociol Rev 48:228–239

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  57. Janssen I et al (2003) Discrimination and delusional ideation. Br J Psychiatry 182:71–76

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  58. Sitko K et al (2014) Associations between specific psychotic symptoms and specific childhood adversities are mediated by attachment styles: an analysis of the National Comorbidity Survey. 217:202–209

  59. van Nierop M et al (2014) Psychopathological mechanisms linking childhood traumatic experiences to risk of psychotic symptoms: analysis of a large, representative population-based sample. Schizophr Bull 40(suppl 2):S123–S130

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  60. Shevlin M et al. Specificity of association between adversities and the occurrence and co-occurrence paranoia and hallucinations: evaluating the stability of risk in an adverse adult environment (in submission)

  61. Oher F et al (2014) The effect of the environment on symptom dimensions in the first episode of psychosis: a multilevel study. Psychol Med 21:1–12

  62. Wickham S et al. Social deprivation in England and the role of social support, stress and trust in depression, paranoia and hallucinations (in press)

  63. Sharpley MS et al (2001) Understanding the excess of psychosis among the African-Caribbean population in England. Br J Psychiatry 178(suppl 40):260–268

    Google Scholar 

  64. Andreasen NC (1982) Should the term ‘thought disorder’ be revised? Compr Psychiatry 23:291–299

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  65. Cuesta MJ, Peralta V (1999) Thought disorder in schizophrenia. Testing models through confirmatory factor analysis. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 249:55–61

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  66. McKenna PJ, Oh TM (2005) Schizophrenic speech: making sense of bathroots and ponds that fall in doorways. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    Google Scholar 

  67. Docherty NM, Hebert AS (1997) Comparative affective reactivity of different types of communication disturbances in schizophrenia. J Abnorm Psychol 106:325–330

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  68. Rubino IA et al (2011) Referential failures and affective reactivity of language in schizophrenia and unipolar depression. Schizophr Bull 37:554–560

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  69. Shimkunas A (1972) Demand for intimate self-disclosure and pathological verbalizations in schizophrenia. J Abnorm Psychol 80:197–205

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  70. Haddock G et al (1995) The effect of emotional salience on the thought disorder of patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Br J Psychiatry 167:618–620

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  71. Tai S, Haddock G, Bentall RP (2004) The effects of emotional salience on thought disorder in patients with bipolar affective disorder. Psychol Med 34:803–809

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  72. Harrow M, Prosen M (1979) Schizophrenic thought disorders: bizarre associations and intermingling. Am J Psychiatry 136:293–296

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  73. Burbridge JA, Larsen RJ, Barch DM (2005) Affective reactivity in language: the role of psychophysiological arousal. Emotion 5:145–153

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  74. Toth SL et al (2011) Illogical thinking and thought disorder in maltreated children. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 50:659–668

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  75. Kerns JG, Berenbaum H (2002) Cognitive impairments associated with formal thought disorder in people with schizophrenia. J Abnorm Psychol 111:211–224

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  76. Meehl P (1962) Schizotaxia, schizotypia, schizophrenia. Am Psychol 17:827–838

    Google Scholar 

  77. Walker EF et al (1981) Effects of parental absence and institutionalization on the development of clinical symptoms in high-risk children. Acta Psychiatr Scand 63:95–109

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  78. Johnson MK, Hashtroudi S, Lindsay DS (1993) Source monitoring. Psychol Bull 114(1):3–28

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  79. Barch DM, Berenbaum H (1996) Language production and thought disorder in schizophrenia. J Abnorm Psychol 105:81–88

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  80. Harvey PD (1985) Reality monitoring in mania and schizophrenia: the association between thought disorder and performance. J Abnorm Psychol 92:368–377

    Google Scholar 

  81. Harvey PD, Serper M (1990) Linguistic and cognitive failures in schizophrenia: a multivariate analysis. J Nerv Mental Dis 178:487–494

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  82. Docherty NM (2012) Missing referents, psychotic symptoms, and discriminating the internal from the externalized. J Abnorm Psychol 121:416–423

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  83. Frith CD (1992) The cognitive neuropsychology of schizophrenia. Lawrence Erlbaum, Hillsdale

    Google Scholar 

  84. Brune M (2005) ‘Theory of mind’ in schizophrenia: a review of the literature. Schizophr Bull 31:21–42

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  85. Sprong M, Schothorst P, Vos E (2007) Theory of mind in schizophrenia: meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 191:5–13

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  86. Sarfati YHB et al (1997) Attribution of mental states to others by schizophrenic patients. Cognit Neuropsychiatr 2:1–17

    Google Scholar 

  87. Sarfati Y et al (1999) Investigating theory of mind in schizophrenia: influence of verbalization in disorganized and non-disorganized patients. Schizophr Res 37:183–190

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  88. Harrow M, Lanin-Kettering I, Miller JG (1989) Impaired perspective and thought pathology in schizophrenic and psychotic disorders. Schizophr Bull 15:605–623

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  89. Satel SL, Sledge WH (1989) Audiotape playback as a technique in the treatment of schizophrenic patients. Am J Psychiatry 146:1012–1016

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  90. Hardy-Baylé M-C, Sarfati Y, Passerieux C (2003) The cognitive basis of disorganization symptomatology in schizophrenia and its clinical correlates. Schizophr Bull 29:459–471

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  91. Cohen JD et al (1999) Context-processing deficits in schizophrenia: converging evidence from three theoretically motivated cognitive tasks. J Abnorm Psychol 108:120–133

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  92. Roesch-Ely D et al (2010) Context representation and thought disorder in schizophrenia. Psychopathology 43:275–284

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  93. Goghari VM, Sponheim SR, MacDonald AW (2010) The functional neuroanatomy of symptom dimensions in schizophrenia: a qualitative and quantitative review of a persistent question. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 34:468–486

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  94. Mohammad OM, DeLisi LE (2013) N400 in schizophrenia patients. Curr Opin Psychiatry 26:196–207

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  95. Spitzer M (1997) A cognitive neuroscience view of schizophrenic thought disorder. Schizophr Bull 23:29–50

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  96. Minzenberg MJ, Ober BA, Vinogradov S (2002) Semantic priming in schizophrenia: a review and synthesis. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 8:699–720

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  97. Pomarol-Clotet E et al (2008) Semantic priming in schizophrenia: systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 192:92–97

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  98. Beck AT et al (2009) Schizophrenia: cognitive theory, research and therapy. Guilford, New York

    Google Scholar 

  99. Wagener DK et al (1986) Information processing and communication deviance in schizophrenic patients and their mothers. Psychiatry Res 18:365–377

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  100. Meins E et al (2002) Maternal mind-mindedness and attachment security as predictors of theory of mind understanding. Child Dev 73:1715–1726

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  101. Milligan K, Astington JW, Dack LA (2007) Language and theory of mind: meta-analysis of the relation between language ability and false-belief understanding. Child Dev 78:622–646

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  102. Wynne LC (1984) The epigenesis of relational systems: a model for understanding family development. Fam Process 23:297–318

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  103. Mundy P, Jarrold W (2010) Infant joint attention, neural networks and social cognition. Neural Netw 23:985–987

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  104. Nelson PB, Adamson LB, Bakeman R (2008) Toddlers’ joint engagement experience facilitates preschoolers’ acquisition of theory of mind. Dev Sci 11:847–852

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  105. van Hecke AV et al (2012) Infant responding to joint attention, executive processes, and self-regulation in preschool children. Infant Behav Dev 35:303–311

    PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  106. Tomasello M, Farrar MJ (1986) Joint attention and early language. Child Dev 57:1454–1463

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  107. Farrant BM, Maybery MT, Fletcher JA (2011) Socio-emotional engagement, joint attention, imitation, and conversation skill: analysis in typical development and specific language impairment. First Language 31:23–46

    Google Scholar 

  108. Welham J et al (2009) The antecedents of schizophrenia: a review of birth cohort studies. Schizophr Bull 35:603–623

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  109. Baethge C et al (2005) Hallucinations in bipolar disorder: characteristics and comparison to unipolar depression and schizophrenia. Bipolar Disord 7:136–145

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  110. Dorahy MJ et al (2009) Auditory hallucinations in dissociative identity disorder and schizophrenia with and without a childhood trauma history: similarities and differences. J Nerv Mental Dis 197:892–898

    Google Scholar 

  111. Beavan V, Read J, Cartwright C (2011) The prevalence of voice-hearers in the general population: a literature review. J Mental Health 20:281–292

    Google Scholar 

  112. Corstens D, Longden E (2013) The origins of voices: links between life history and voice hearing in a survey of 100 cases. Psychosis 5:270–285

    Google Scholar 

  113. Hardy A et al (2005) Trauma and hallucinatory experiences in psychosis. J Nerv Mental Dis 193:501–507

    Google Scholar 

  114. Reiff M et al (2011) Childhood abuse and the content of adult psychotic symptoms. Psychol Trauma Theory Res Pract Policy 4:356–369

    Google Scholar 

  115. Ditman T, Kuperberg GR (2005) A source-monitoring account of auditory verbal hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia. Harvard Rev Psychiatry 13:280–299

    Google Scholar 

  116. Laroi F, Woodward TS (2007) Hallucinations from a cognitive perspective. Harvard Rev Psychiatry 15:109–117

    Google Scholar 

  117. Waters F et al (2012) Auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia and nonschizophrenia populations: a review and integrated model of cognitive mechanisms. Schizophr Bull 38(4):683–693

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  118. Bentall RP (1990) The illusion of reality: a review and integration of psychological research on hallucinations. Psychol Bull 107:82–95

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  119. Brookwell L, Bentall RP, Varese F (2013) Externalizing biases and hallucinations in source-monitoring, self-monitoring and signal detection studies: a meta-analytic review. Psychol Med 43:2465–2475

  120. Waters F et al (2012) Self-recognition deficits in schizophrenia patients with auditory hallucinations: a meta-analysis of the literature. Schizophr Bull 38(4):741–750

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  121. Ford JM et al (2007) Synch before you speak: auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia. Am J Psychiatry 164:458–466

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  122. Whitford TJ et al (2011) Electrophysiological and diffusion tensor imaging evidence of delayed corollary discharges in patients with schizophrenia. Psychol Med 41:959–969

    CAS  PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  123. Brewin CR et al (2010) Intrusive images in psychological disorders: characteristics, neural mechanisms, and treatment implications. Psychol Rev 117:210–232

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  124. Laroi F, van der Linden M, Marczewski P (2004) The effects of emotional salience, cognitive effort and meta-cognitive beliefs on a reality monitoring task in hallucination-prone subjects. Br J Clin Psychol 43:221–233

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  125. Bentall RP, Baker GA, Havers S (1991) Reality monitoring and psychotic hallucinations. Br J Clin Psychol 30:213–222

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  126. Bendall S, Jackson HJ, Hulbert CA (2011) What self-generated speech is externally misattributed in psychosis? Testing three cognitive models in a first-episode sample. Schizophr Res 129:36–41

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  127. Varese F, Barkus E, Bentall RP (2011) Dissociation mediates the relationship between childhood trauma and hallucination-proneness. Psychol Med 42:1025–1036

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  128. Longden E, Madill A, Waterman MG (2011) Dissociation, trauma, and the role of lived experience: toward a new conceptualization of voice hearing. Psychol Bull 138:28–76

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  129. Moskowitz A, Corstens D (2007) Auditory hallucinations: psychotic symptom or dissociative experience. J Psychol Trauma 6:35–63

    Google Scholar 

  130. Perona-Garcelán S et al (2012) Dissociative experiences as mediators between childhood trauma and auditory hallucinations. J Trauma Stress 25(3):323–329

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  131. Varese F et al (2011) The relationship between dissociation and auditory verbal hallucinations in the flow of daily life in patients with psychosis. Psychosis 3:14–28

  132. Morrison AP (2001) The interpretation of intrusions in psychosis: an integrative cognitive approach to hallucinations and delusions. Behav Cognit Psychotherapy 29:257–276

    Google Scholar 

  133. Andrew EM, Gray NS, Snowden RJ (2008) The relationship between trauma and beliefs about hearing voices: a study of psychiatric and non-psychiatric voice hearers. Psychol Med 38:1409–1417

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  134. Chadwick P, Birchwood M (1994) The omnipotence of voices: a cognitive approach to auditory hallucinations. Br J Psychiatry 164:190–201

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  135. Morrison AP et al (2004) Interpretations of voices in patients with hallucinations and non-patient controls: a comparison and predictors of distress in patients. Behav Res Ther 42:1315–1323

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  136. Berry K et al (2012) An investigation of adult attachment and the nature of relationships with voices. Br J Clin Psychol 51:280–291

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  137. Birchwood M et al (2000) The power and omnipotence of voices: subordination and entrapment by voices and significant others. Psychol Med 30:337–344

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  138. Pérez-Alvarez M et al (2008) Changing the relationship with voices: new therapeutic perspectives for treating hallucinations. Clin Psychol Psychotherapy 15:75–85

    Google Scholar 

  139. Jorgensen P, Jensen J (1994) Delusional beliefs in first admitters. Psychopathology 27:100–112

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  140. Freeman D, Garety PA (2000) Comments on the contents of persecutory delusions: does the definition need clarification? Br J Clin Psychol 39:407–414

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  141. Freeman D et al (2005) Psychological investigation of the structure of paranoia in a non-clinical population. Br J Psychiatry 186:427–435

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  142. Freeman D, Garety PA, Kuipers E (2001) Persecutory delusions: developing the understanding of belief maintenance and emotional distress. Psychol Med 31:1293–1306

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  143. Bentall RP, Kinderman P, Kaney S (1994) The self, attributional processes and abnormal beliefs: towards a model of persecutory delusions. Behav Res Ther 32:331–341

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  144. Trower P, Chadwick P (1995) Pathways to defense of the self: a theory of two types of paranoia. Clin Psychol Sci Pract 2:263–278

    Google Scholar 

  145. Melo S, Taylor J, Bentall RP (2006) ‘Poor me’ versus ‘bad me’ paranoia and the instability of persecutory ideation. Psychol Psychotherapy Theory Res Pract 79:271–287

    Google Scholar 

  146. Udachina A et al (2012) Dynamics of self-esteem in ‘poor-me’ and ‘bad-me’ paranoia. J Nerv Mental Dis 200:777–783

    Google Scholar 

  147. Garety P, Freeman D (1999) Cognitive approaches to delusions: a critical review of theories and evidence. Br J Clin Psychol 38:113–154

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  148. Corcoran R et al (2008) A transdiagnostic investigation of theory of mind and jumping to conclusions in paranoia: a comparison of schizophrenia and depression with and without delusions. Psychol Med 38:1577–1583

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  149. Bentall RP et al (2001) Persecutory delusions: a review and theoretical integration. Clin Psychol Rev 21:1143–1192

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  150. Bentall RP et al (2008) Paranoid delusions in schizophrenia and depression: the transdiagnostic role of expectations of negative events and negative self-esteem. J Nerv Mental Dis 196:375–383

    Google Scholar 

  151. Freeman D et al (2007) Acting on persecutory delusions: the importance of safety seeking. Behav Res Ther 45:89–99

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  152. Bentall RP et al (2009) The cognitive and affective structure of paranoid delusions: a transdiagnostic investigation of patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders and depression. Arch Gen Psychiatry 66:236–247

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  153. Moutoussis M et al (2008) A temporal difference account of avoidance learning. Netw Comput Neural Syst 19:137–160

    Google Scholar 

  154. Romaniuk L et al (2010) Midbrain activation during Pavlovian conditioning and delusional symptoms in schizophrenia. Arch Gen Psychiatry 67(12):1246–1254

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  155. Freeman D et al (2002) A cognitive model of persecutory delusions. Br J Clin Psychol 41:331–347

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  156. Woodward T et al (2009) Change in delusions is associated with change in ‘jumping to conclusions’. Psychiatry Res 170:124–127

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  157. Tierman B, Tracey R, Shannon C (2014) Paranoia and self-concepts in psychosis: a systematic review of the literature. Psychiatry Res 216:303–313

    Google Scholar 

  158. Janssen I et al (2006) Attributional style and psychosis: evidence for externalizing bias in patients but not individuals at high risk. Psychol Med 27:1–8

    Google Scholar 

  159. Thompson A et al (2011) Association between locus of control in childhood and psychotic symptoms in early adolescence: results from a large birth cohort. Cognit Neuropsychiatry 16:385–402

    Google Scholar 

  160. Bowlby J (1969) Attachment and loss: attachment, vol 1. Hogarth Press, London

    Google Scholar 

  161. Pinquart M, Feußner C, Ahnert L (2013) Meta-analytic evidence for stability in attachments from infancy to early adulthood. Attach Hum Dev 15:189–218

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  162. Mickelson K, Kessler R, Shaver P (1997) Adult attachment in a nationally representative sample. J Pers Soc Psychol 73:1092–1106

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  163. Pickering L, Simpson J, Bentall RP (2008) Insecure attachment predicts proneness to paranoia but not hallucinations. Pers Individ Differ 44:1212–1224

    Google Scholar 

  164. Dozier M, Stovall KC, Albus K (1999) Attachment and psychopathology in adulthood. In: Cassidy J, Shaver P (eds) Handbook of attachment. Guilford Press, New York, pp 497–519

    Google Scholar 

  165. Wickham S, Sitko K, Bentall RP. Insecure attachment is associated with paranoia but not hallucinations in psychotic patients: the mediating role of negative self esteem (in submission)

  166. Sheffield JM et al (2013) Reduced gray matter volume in psychotic disorder patients with a history of childhood sexual abuse. Schizophr Res 143:185–191

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  167. Marr D (1982) Vision: a computational investigation into human representation and processing of visual information. W.H. Freeman, San Francisco

    Google Scholar 

  168. Morgan C, Fisher H (2007) Environmental factors in schizophrenia: childhood trauma—a critical review. Schizophr Bull 33:3–10

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  169. Cotton S et al (2009) Gender differences in premorbid, entry, treatment, and outcome characteristics in a treated epidemiological sample of 661 patients with first episode psychosis. Schizophr Res 114:17–24

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  170. Abel KM, Drake R, Goldstein JM (2009) Sex differences in schizophrenia. Int Rev Psychiatry 22:417–428

    Google Scholar 

  171. Fibiger HC (2012) Psychiatry, the pharmaceutical industry, and the road to better therapeutics. Schizophr Bull 38:649–650

    PubMed Central  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  172. Jauhar S et al (2014) Cognitive-behavioural therapy for the symptoms of schizophrenia: systematic review and meta-analysis with examination of potential bias. Br J Psychiatry 204:20–29

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

Download references

Conflict of interest

On behalf of all authors, the corresponding author states that there is no conflict of interest.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Richard P. Bentall.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Bentall, R.P., de Sousa, P., Varese, F. et al. From adversity to psychosis: pathways and mechanisms from specific adversities to specific symptoms. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 49, 1011–1022 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-014-0914-0

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00127-014-0914-0

Keywords

Navigation