Associations between responses to voices, distress and appraisals during daily life: an ecological validation of the cognitive behavioural model

Sarah F. Fielding-Smith, Kathryn E. Greenwood, Marieke Wichers, Emmanuelle Peters, Mark Hayward*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
43 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background Cognitive models propose that behavioural responses to voices maintain distress by preventing disconfirmation of negative beliefs about voices. We used Experience Sampling Methodology (ESM) to examine the hypothesized maintenance role of behavioural responses during daily life. Method Thirty-one outpatients with frequent voices completed a smartphone-based ESM questionnaire 10 times a day over 9 days, assessing voice-related distress; resistance and compliance responses to voices; voice characteristics (intensity and negative content); appraisals of voice dominance, uncontrollability and intrusiveness. Results In line with predictions, behavioural responses were associated with voice appraisals (dominance and uncontrollability), but not voice characteristics. Greater resistance and compliance were reported in moments of increased voice distress, but these associations did not persist after controlling for concurrent voice appraisals and characteristics. Voice distress was predicted by appraisals, and, unexpectedly, also by voice characteristics. As predicted, compliance and resistance were related to increases in distress at subsequent timepoints, whilst antecedent voice appraisals and characteristics had no such effect. Compliance, but not resistance, additionally predicted subsequent increases in voice uncontrollability. In both cases, the reverse models showed no association, indicating directional effects of responses on subsequent distress, and of compliance on uncontrollability appraisals. Conclusions These results provide support for the cognitive model by suggesting that momentary behavioural and emotional responses to voices are associated with concurrent negative voice appraisals. Findings suggest that behavioural responses may be driven by voice appraisals, rather than directly by distress, and may in turn maintain voice appraisals and associated distress during the course of daily life.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)538-547
Number of pages10
JournalPsychological Medicine
Volume52
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb-2022

Keywords

  • Appraisals
  • auditory verbal hallucinations
  • cognitive model
  • experience sampling
  • distress
  • responses
  • voice hearing
  • EXPERIENCE SAMPLING RESEARCH
  • AUDITORY HALLUCINATIONS
  • COMMAND HALLUCINATIONS
  • HEARING VOICES
  • SOCIAL RANK
  • THERAPY
  • POWER
  • SCHIZOPHRENIA
  • OMNIPOTENCE
  • PREDICTORS

Cite this