White Noise Speech Illusions: A Trait-Dependent Risk Marker for Psychotic Disorder?
Author
ALTINYAZAR, VESİLE
Cabrera, Bibiana
Bobes, Julio
Saiz, Pilar A.
Paz Garcia-Portilla, Maria
Sanjuan, Julio
Aguilar, Eduardo J.
Luis Santos, Jose
Jimenez-Lopez, Estela
Arrojo, Manuel
Carracedo, Angel
Lopez, Gonzalo
Gonzalez-Penas, Javier
Parellada, Mara
Maric, Nadja P.
Atbasoglu, Cem
ALPTEKİN, KÖKSAL
SAKA, MERAM CAN
Arango, Celso
Rutten, Bart P. F.
van Os, Jim
Ucok, Alp
Schepers, Elaine
Lousberg, Richel
Guloksuz, Sinan
Pries, Lotta-Katrin
Delespaul, Philippe
Kenis, Gunter
Luykx, Jurjen J.
Lin, Bochao D.
Richards, Alexander L.
Akdede, Berna
Binbay, Tolga
Yalincetin, Berna
Gumus-Akay, Guvem
Cihan, Burcin
Soygur, Haldun
ULAŞ, HALİS
Cankurtaran, Eylem Sahin
Kaymak, Semra Ulusoy
Mihaljevic, Marina M.
Petrovic, Sanja Andric
Mirjanic, Tijana
Bernardo, Miguel
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Introduction: White noise speech illusions index liability for psychotic disorder in case-control comparisons. In the current study, we examined i) the rate of white noise speech illusions in siblings of patients with psychotic disorder and ii) to what degree this rate would be contingent on exposure to known environmental risk factors (childhood adversity and recent life events) and level of known endophenotypic dimensions of psychotic disorder [psychotic experiences assessed with the Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE) scale and cognitive ability].
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