» Articles » PMID: 27371990

Persecutory Delusions: a Cognitive Perspective on Understanding and Treatment

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2016 Jul 4
PMID 27371990
Citations 108
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

A spectrum of severity of paranoia (unfounded thoughts that others are deliberately intending to cause harm) exists within the general population. This is unsurprising: deciding whether to trust or mistrust is a vital aspect of human cognition, but accurate judgment of others' intentions is challenging. The severest form of paranoia is persecutory delusions, when the ideas are held with strong conviction. This paper presents a distillation of a cognitive approach that is being translated into treatment for this major psychiatric problem. Persecutory delusions are viewed as threat beliefs, developed in the context of genetic and environmental risk, and maintained by several psychological processes including excessive worry, low self-confidence, intolerance of anxious affect and other internal anomalous experiences, reasoning biases, and the use of safety-seeking strategies. The clinical implication is that safety has to be relearned, by entering feared situations after reduction of the influence of the maintenance factors. An exciting area of development will be a clinical intervention science of how best to enhance learning of safety to counteract paranoia.

Citing Articles

Manipulating self and other schemas to explore psychological processes associated with paranoid beliefs: an online experimental study.

Martinez A, Milne E, Rowse G, Bentall R Front Psychol. 2025; 15:1474562.

PMID: 39886371 PMC: 11781115. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1474562.


Digital Interventions for Symptoms of Borderline Personality Disorder: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Lindsay J, McGowan N, Henning T, Harriss E, Saunders K J Med Internet Res. 2024; 26:e54941.

PMID: 39612494 PMC: 11645515. DOI: 10.2196/54941.


Theory driven psychological therapy for persecutory delusions: trajectories of patient outcomes.

Jenner L, Payne M, Waite F, Beckwith H, Diamond R, Isham L Psychol Med. 2024; :1-9.

PMID: 39552390 PMC: 11650162. DOI: 10.1017/S0033291724002113.


Visual hallucinations in psychosis: What do people actually see?.

Aynsworth C, Waite F, Sargeant S, Humpston C, Dudley R Psychol Psychother. 2024; 98(1):58-73.

PMID: 39552265 PMC: 11823304. DOI: 10.1111/papt.12553.


Could an evaluative conditioning intervention ameliorate paranoid beliefs? Self-reported and neurophysiological evidence from a brief intervention focused on improving self-esteem.

Trucharte A, Carmen V, Pacios J, Bruna R, Espinosa R, Peinado V Front Psychiatry. 2024; 15:1472332.

PMID: 39507280 PMC: 11538027. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1472332.