van der Leer L, Hartig B, Goldmanis M, McKay R
ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders,Department of Psychology,Royal Holloway,University of London,Egham,Surrey,UK.
Department of Economics,Royal Holloway,University of London,Egham,Surrey,UK.
Psychol Med. 2015 Apr;45(6):1253-62. doi: 10.1017/S0033291714002359. Epub 2014 Oct 2.
That delusional and delusion-prone individuals 'jump to conclusions' is one of the most robust and important findings in the literature on delusions. However, although the notion of 'jumping to conclusions' (JTC) implies gathering insufficient evidence and reaching premature decisions, previous studies have not investigated whether the evidence gathering of delusion-prone individuals is, in fact, suboptimal. The standard JTC effect is a relative effect but using relative comparisons to substantiate absolute claims is problematic. In this study we investigated whether delusion-prone participants jump to conclusions in both a relative and an absolute sense.
Healthy participants (n = 112) completed an incentivized probabilistic reasoning task in which correct decisions were rewarded and additional information could be requested for a small price. This combination of rewards and costs generated optimal decision points. Participants also completed measures of delusion proneness, intelligence and risk aversion.
Replicating the standard relative finding, we found that delusion proneness significantly predicted task decisions, such that the more delusion prone the participants were, the earlier they decided. This finding was robust when accounting for the effects of risk aversion and intelligence. Importantly, high-delusion-prone participants also decided in advance of an objective rational optimum, gathering fewer data than would have maximized their expected payoff. Surprisingly, we found that even low-delusion-prone participants jumped to conclusions in this absolute sense.
Our findings support and clarify the claim that delusion formation is associated with a tendency to 'jump to conclusions'. In short, most people jump to conclusions, but more delusion-prone individuals 'jump further'.
妄想及易产生妄想的个体“急于下结论”是妄想文献中最为有力且重要的发现之一。然而,尽管“急于下结论”(JTC)这一概念意味着收集的证据不足且过早做出决定,但以往研究并未考察易产生妄想的个体在证据收集方面是否实际上并不理想。标准的JTC效应是一种相对效应,但用相对比较来证实绝对论断存在问题。在本研究中,我们考察了易产生妄想的参与者在相对和绝对意义上是否都会急于下结论。
健康参与者(n = 112)完成了一项有奖励的概率推理任务,正确决定会得到奖励,额外信息只需支付少量费用即可获取。奖励与成本的这种组合产生了最佳决策点。参与者还完成了易产生妄想程度、智力和风险厌恶程度的测量。
重复标准的相对研究结果,我们发现易产生妄想程度显著预测任务决策,即参与者越易产生妄想,他们做决定就越早。在考虑风险厌恶和智力的影响时,这一发现很可靠。重要的是,高易产生妄想程度的参与者也在客观合理的最优决策点之前就做出了决定,收集的数据比能使预期收益最大化的数据要少。令人惊讶的是,我们发现即使是低易产生妄想程度的参与者在这种绝对意义上也会急于下结论。
我们的研究结果支持并阐明了妄想形成与“急于下结论”的倾向有关这一论断。简而言之,大多数人都会急于下结论,但更易产生妄想的个体“下结论更快”。