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Delusions and decision-making style: use of the Need for Closure Scale
Authors:Freeman Daniel  Garety Philippa  Kuipers Elizabeth  Colbert Susannah  Jolley Suzanne  Fowler David  Dunn Graham  Bebbington Paul
Affiliation:Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, University of London, PO Box 77, Denmark Hill, London, SE5 8AF, UK. D.Freeman@iop.kcl.ac.uk
Abstract:Clinicians and researchers have suggested that rapidity in belief formation, due to having a high 'need for closure' (NFC), may contribute to the acceptance of delusional explanations. The aim of the study is to determine whether NFC has such a direct link with delusions. A secondary aim is to examine if NFC is related to the delusion-associated reasoning process of 'jumping to conclusions'. One hundred and eighty-seven patients with psychosis, recruited for a treatment trial of psychological therapy (the PRP trial), completed the Need for Closure Scale (NFCS), symptom measures, and probabilistic reasoning tasks. The NFCS was considered in terms of its two dimensions: a desire for simple structure and a preference for quick, decisive answers. The individuals with psychosis reported being poor at making quick, decisive answers but required a greater need for simple structure. NFC was associated with levels of anxiety and depression. There were weak links between NFC and both positive and negative symptoms of psychosis, but these were explained by differences in affect. NFCS scores were unrelated to jumping to conclusions. Contrary to the argument that NFC is directly linked to delusions, individuals with delusions actually perceive themselves as indecisive. There was no evidence that NFC-at least as assessed by the NFCS-could be a proximal cause of delusions. Any potential effect on psychotic symptom presentation is indirect, mediated through affect. The use of the NFCS on its own in the study of psychotic symptoms cannot be recommended.
Keywords:Psychosis   Delusions   Reasoning   Schizophrenia
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