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Self-Reported Cognitive Functions Predict the Trajectory of Paranoid Ideation Over a 15-Year Prospective Follow-Up
by
Granö Niklas
, Lehtimäki Terho
, Saarinen Aino I L
in
Adults
/ Attention
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Cognition
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive functioning
/ Distraction
/ Early intervention
/ Flexibility
/ Ideation
/ Life course
/ Long term
/ Marital status
/ Measures
/ Paranoia
/ Perseveration
/ Population studies
/ Protective factors
/ Self evaluation
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Temperament
2021
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Self-Reported Cognitive Functions Predict the Trajectory of Paranoid Ideation Over a 15-Year Prospective Follow-Up
by
Granö Niklas
, Lehtimäki Terho
, Saarinen Aino I L
in
Adults
/ Attention
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Cognition
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive functioning
/ Distraction
/ Early intervention
/ Flexibility
/ Ideation
/ Life course
/ Long term
/ Marital status
/ Measures
/ Paranoia
/ Perseveration
/ Population studies
/ Protective factors
/ Self evaluation
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Temperament
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
Self-Reported Cognitive Functions Predict the Trajectory of Paranoid Ideation Over a 15-Year Prospective Follow-Up
by
Granö Niklas
, Lehtimäki Terho
, Saarinen Aino I L
in
Adults
/ Attention
/ Childhood
/ Children
/ Cognition
/ Cognitive ability
/ Cognitive functioning
/ Distraction
/ Early intervention
/ Flexibility
/ Ideation
/ Life course
/ Long term
/ Marital status
/ Measures
/ Paranoia
/ Perseveration
/ Population studies
/ Protective factors
/ Self evaluation
/ Socioeconomic factors
/ Temperament
2021
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Self-Reported Cognitive Functions Predict the Trajectory of Paranoid Ideation Over a 15-Year Prospective Follow-Up
Journal Article
Self-Reported Cognitive Functions Predict the Trajectory of Paranoid Ideation Over a 15-Year Prospective Follow-Up
2021
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Overview
BackgroundThis study investigated whether self-reported cognitive functions (i.e. task orientation, distractibility, persistence, flexibility, and perseverance) predict the trajectory of paranoid ideation over a 15-year prospective follow-up in adulthood.MethodsThe participants came from the population-based Young Finns study (N = 1210‒1213). Paranoid ideation was assessed with the Paranoid Ideation Scale of the Symptom Checklist-90 Revised (SCL-90R) in 1997, 2001, 2007, and 2012. Self-reported cognitive functions were evaluated in 1997 with the Task orientation, Distractibility, Persistence, and Flexibility scales of the DOTS-R (the Revised Dimensions of Temperament Survey) and the Perseverance scale of the FCB-TI (the Formal Characteristics of Behaviour – Temperament Inventory). The data was analyzed using growth curve models that were adjusted for age, sex, and socioeconomic factors in childhood and adulthood.ResultsLow self-reported task orientation, low persistence, high distractibility, low flexibility, and high perseverance predicted higher level of paranoid ideation over the 15-year follow-up.ConclusionsSelf-reported cognitive functions seem to predict paranoid ideation over a long-term follow-up. Promoting cognitive functions in early interventions may have long-term protective influences against the development of paranoid ideation in non-clinical populations.
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