Centrality of religiosity, schizotypy, and human values: the impact of religious affiliation

Previous research has established a reliable link between religiosity and schizotypy as well as schizophrenia. However, past research mainly measured religiosity as a one-dimensional construct. In the present research (N = 189), we aimed to get a better understanding of the religiosity-schizotypy li...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Religions
Authors: Hanel, Paul H. P. (Author) ; Demmrich, Sarah 1986- (Author) ; Wolfradt, Uwe 1961- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: MDPI 2019
In: Religions
Further subjects:B Religious Affiliation
B Human Values
B Religiosity
B SCHIZOTYPY
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Summary:Previous research has established a reliable link between religiosity and schizotypy as well as schizophrenia. However, past research mainly measured religiosity as a one-dimensional construct. In the present research (N = 189), we aimed to get a better understanding of the religiosity-schizotypy link by measuring religiosity using Huber's five-dimensional model of Centrality of Religiosity, while also testing for curvilinear relations and potential moderators. We found negative small-to-medium-sized correlations between all five dimensions of religiosity and the schizotypy dimension of impulsive nonconformity, but no reliable associations with the other three dimensions of schizotypy: unusual experiences, cognitive disorganization, and introverted anhedonia. Some of these associations were moderated by religious affiliation: Religiosity and schizotypy correlated positively among non-members, but negatively among members of religious communities, suggesting that affiliation has a positive impact on the well-being of religious people. In line with Huber's predictions, we found a reversed U-shape association between the religious dimension of private religious practice and schizotypy. Unexpectedly, however, conformity and tradition values did not moderate the relations between religiosity and schizotypy. We discuss our findings in terms of person-environment fit, the prevention hypothesis of the schizotypy-religiosity link, and offer implications for mental health practitioners.
ISSN:2077-1444
Contains:Enthalten in: Religions
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.3390/rel10050297