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Mental imagery use and it‘s realtionship with anhedonia in psychosis. An experience sampling study
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Pillny, Matthias
Hallford, David
Böge, Kerem
Abstract / Description
Anticipatory pleasure is a positive affect state in response to a mental representation of a future event. In cognitive neuroscience, anticipatory pleasure is discussed as a key motivational mechanism driving goal-directed behavior. This project will investigate whether people with negative symptoms of psychotic disorders show lower quantity (e.g. frequency) and quality (e.g. less vividness / detailedness) of mental representations of positive events than healthy controls. Moreover, we aim to investigate whether these differences are related to reduced anticipatory pleasure in people with negative symptoms. We will recruit 43 subjects with psychotic disorders and at least mild negative symptoms and 43 demographically matched healthy controls at the Psychotherapeutic University Outpatient Clinic of Universität Hamburg and the Clinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy of Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin. At baseline, participants will answer structured interviews and questionnaires to assess mental health and the quantity and quality of mental imagery use. Following baseline assessment, participants will answer one week ecological momentary assessment of anticipatory pleasure and goal-directed activity in daily-life. We will carry out quantitative data analyses. These include testing for group differences using multifactorial variance analyzes and examining correlative relationships using linear regression and multilevel models. We expect that participants with negative symptoms will report quantitatively and qualitatively less positive mental representations than participants in the control group. We also expect that positive mental representations will show positive associations with anticipatory pleasure and negative associations with motivational symptoms.
Keyword(s)
Schizophrenia Psychosis Anhedonia Negative Symptoms Mental Imagery Episodic Future Thinking Mental Time Travel Experience Sampling Ecological Momentary AssessmentPersistent Identifier
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp
2022-01-21 12:11:52 UTC
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
Pillny, M., Hallford, D., & Böge, K. (2022). Mental imagery use and it‘s realtionship with anhedonia in psychosis. An experience sampling study. PsychArchives. http://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5349
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prereg_MIandNES_rev.pdfAdobe PDF - 252.84KBMD5: 9c62fca2577e77dc7b3925488465fc39
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92023-03-17Applied changes from July 2022 that have not been saved in September version (see change log July 2022)
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82022-10-10Omitted redundant outcome measure for cross-sectional analyses (i.e. BNSS single item analyses)
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72022-09-05Applied missing changes according to change log from July, 17th to preregistration record
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62022-07-12Changed analysis plan for correlational findings from categorical to dimensional approach by including the entire sample in analyses. Changes have been applied before completion of data collection and prior to analyses.
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32022-01-21Included Snaith-Hamilton-Pleasure-Scale (SHAPS; Snaith et al., 2995; Franz et al., 1998) as a measure of trait anticipatory pleasure; Included a regression model predicting trait anticipatory pleasure (SHAPS) by mental imagery parameters
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22021-12-27Abstract has been revised, typos have been removed; Changed order of authorships from Pillny, Böge, & Hallford to Pillny, Hallford, & Böge
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Pillny, Matthias
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Hallford, David
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Böge, Kerem
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2022-01-21T12:11:52Z
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Made available on2021-12-13T16:24:32Z
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Made available on2021-12-27T13:55:45Z
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Made available on2022-01-21T12:11:52Z
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Date of first publication2022-01-21
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Abstract / DescriptionAnticipatory pleasure is a positive affect state in response to a mental representation of a future event. In cognitive neuroscience, anticipatory pleasure is discussed as a key motivational mechanism driving goal-directed behavior. This project will investigate whether people with negative symptoms of psychotic disorders show lower quantity (e.g. frequency) and quality (e.g. less vividness / detailedness) of mental representations of positive events than healthy controls. Moreover, we aim to investigate whether these differences are related to reduced anticipatory pleasure in people with negative symptoms. We will recruit 43 subjects with psychotic disorders and at least mild negative symptoms and 43 demographically matched healthy controls at the Psychotherapeutic University Outpatient Clinic of Universität Hamburg and the Clinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy of Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin. At baseline, participants will answer structured interviews and questionnaires to assess mental health and the quantity and quality of mental imagery use. Following baseline assessment, participants will answer one week ecological momentary assessment of anticipatory pleasure and goal-directed activity in daily-life. We will carry out quantitative data analyses. These include testing for group differences using multifactorial variance analyzes and examining correlative relationships using linear regression and multilevel models. We expect that participants with negative symptoms will report quantitatively and qualitatively less positive mental representations than participants in the control group. We also expect that positive mental representations will show positive associations with anticipatory pleasure and negative associations with motivational symptoms.en_US
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Publication statusotheren
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Review statusnotRevieweden
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CitationPillny, M., Hallford, D., & Böge, K. (2022). Mental imagery use and it‘s realtionship with anhedonia in psychosis. An experience sampling study. PsychArchives. http://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5349en_US
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/4694.3
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5349
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Language of contentengen_US
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PublisherPsychArchivesen_US
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Keyword(s)Schizophreniaen_US
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Keyword(s)Psychosisen_US
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Keyword(s)Anhedoniaen_US
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Keyword(s)Negative Symptomsen_US
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Keyword(s)Mental Imageryen_US
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Keyword(s)Episodic Future Thinkingen_US
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Keyword(s)Mental Time Travelen_US
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Keyword(s)Experience Samplingen_US
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Keyword(s)Ecological Momentary Assessmenten_US
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleMental imagery use and it‘s realtionship with anhedonia in psychosis. An experience sampling studyen_US
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DRO typepreregistrationen_US
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Leibniz subject classificationPsychologiede_DE