Paranormal belief and well-being: The moderating roles of transliminality and psychopathology-related facets
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Publication date
2022-08-15Abstract
Evaluation of prior research suggests that belief in the paranormal is more
likely to be associated with negative psychological functioning, when
presented alongside cognitive-perceptual factors that askew thinking and
insight. The current study examined this notion using a sample of 3,084
participants (1,382 males, 1,693 females, nine non-binary). Respondents
completed self-report measures assessing Paranormal Belief, Transliminality,
psychopathology-related characteristics (Schizotypy and Manic-Depressive
Experience), and well-being (Perceived Stress and Somatic Complaints).
Responses were analysed via correlations and moderation. Paranormal Belief
correlated positively with Transliminality, psychopathology-related measures,
Perceived Stress, and Somatic Complaints. Moderation analyses revealed
that Transliminality and psychopathology-related variables (i.e., the Unusual
Experiences and Cognitive Disorganisation subscales of schizotypy, and
Manic-Depressive Experience) interacted with Paranormal Belief in complex
ways and were allied to higher scores on negative well-being outcomes.
This indicated that within paranormal believers, Transliminality and specific
psychopathology-related variables in combination predicted susceptibility to
negative well-being outcomes.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
1 - Philosophy. Psychology
Keywords
Pages
12 p.
Publisher
Frontiers
Is part of
Frontiers in Psychology, 15 agost 2022
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© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

