Browsing by Subject "Openness"
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Item Electrophysiological and Personality Factors Associated with Aberrant Visual Processing in Psychosis(2019-08) Longenecker, Julia‘Apophenia’, or the tendency to find patterns in unrelated perceptions, may link normative and pathological sensory experiences. Apophenia has been well-characterized by personality assessment, but has limited behavioral and functional correlates, particularly in clinical populations. Object detection is predicted by apophenia traits in normative populations. Behavioral and neurobiological object detection abnormalities are pervasive in schizophrenia, yet have not been investigated with respect to apophenia. The current set of studies explore multiple levels of perceptual disturbances in normative and psychiatric samples. Study 1 investigated personality and object detection in an undergraduate sample (N=191). The object detection task, Fragmented Ambiguous Object Task (FAOT), controls for low-level visual properties while presenting disjointed object representations of varying difficulty. Personality was comprehensively assessed with the Big Five Aspect Scale (BFAS), Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire (MPQ), and Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5). Study 2 sought to replicate Study 1 in a clinical population and extend the investigation to EEG in outpatients with psychotic disorders, first-degree biological relatives, and psychiatrically unaffected individuals. Event-related potentials (ERPs) – P1, N1, closure negativity (NCL), and anterior components – were recorded with a 128 channel EEG system. Participants underwent comprehensive clinical assessment, and completed MPQ Absorption and PID-5. In Study 1, object detection was positively associated with BFAS Openness, MPQ Absorption and PID-5 Psychoticism. Additionally, BFAS Conscientiousness and PID-5 Disinhibition predicted object detection. Study 2 did not replicate the association between FAOT and personality, or show an object detection deficit in psychotic disorders. The hypotheses regarding ERPs were largely unsupported. Instead, findings suggested group differences in semantic processing during FAOT, and an anterior component associated with frequent object detection. Personality measures of apophenia were consistently related to experimentally manipulated visual perception in the general population but not persons with psychotic disorders. The present research attempted to unify observations in personality psychology, clinical research, and vision neuroscience of object detection. Deviations in perceptual functions that support the detection of ambiguous visual stimuli reflect normative expressions of trait-level apophenia. However, further investigation is necessary to connect apophenia to psychotic phenomenology in the context of mental illness.Item Functional Brain Networks and the Openness-Psychosis Continuum(2019-10) Blain, ScottPsychosis proneness has been linked to heightened Openness to Experience and to cognitive deficits. Openness and psychotic disorders are associated with the default and frontoparietal networks, and the latter network is also robustly associated with intelligence. We tested the hypothesis that functional connectivity of the default and frontoparietal networks is a neural correlate of the openness-psychoticism dimension. Participants in the Human Connectome Project (N = 1003) completed measures of psychoticism, openness, and intelligence. Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to identify intrinsic connectivity networks. Structural equation modeling revealed relations among personality, intelligence, and network coherence. Psychoticism, openness, and especially their shared variance, were related positively to default network coherence and negatively to frontoparietal coherence. These associations remained after controlling for intelligence. Intelligence was positively related to frontoparietal coherence. Research suggests psychoticism and openness are linked in part through their association with connectivity in networks involving experiential simulation and cognitive control. We propose a model of psychosis risk that highlights roles of the default and frontoparietal networks. Findings echo research on functional connectivity in psychosis patients, suggesting shared mechanisms across the personality-psychopathology continuum.