About this Research Topic
Our research topic will target this new generation of studies focusing on the clinical phenomenology of hallucinations and delusions and their relation to treatment seeking in non-clinical community-based samples. We want to understand the associations of these clinical markers with known protective and risk factors of psychosis severity in non-clinical populations including individual-level factors (e.g. stress, trauma, schizotypy, insomnia, mood/ anxiety symptoms) and cultural-level factors (e.g. extraordinary beliefs in spirits, black magic, evil eye, religiosity, stigma) , and their influence on treatment seeking in these otherwise healthy populations
• Clinical phenomenology (symptom frequency, duration, distress, insight and impact on psychosocial functioning)
• Hallucinations and delusions
• Treatment seeking
• Associations with individual-level variables (e.g. stress, trauma, schizotypy, insomnia, mood/anxiety symptoms)
• Associations with cultural-level variables (e.g. extraordinary beliefs in spirits, black magic, evil eye, religiosity, stigma)
• Associations with treatment seeking beliefs and practices
Keywords: Clinical markers, Treatment-seeking, Hallucinations, Delusions, Non-clinical Populations
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.