Paranoid Thought and Schematic ProcessingAllan FenigsteinAllan Fenigstein1 Kenyon CollegeSearch for more papers by this authorPublished Online:January 2011https://doi.org/10.1521/jscp.1997.16.1.77PDFPDF PLUS ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinkedInRedditEmail ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack Citations About Previous article Next article FiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Cited byCited by1. Fenigstein, AllanOnline publication date: 22 April 2020. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar2. Fenigstein, AllanOnline publication date: 5 December 2018. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar3. Terror Management Theory and Psychological DisorderOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar4. How paranoid are conspiracy believers? Toward a more fine-grained understanding of the connect and disconnect between paranoia and belief in conspiracy theoriesOnline publication date: 30 May 2018. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar5. Paranoia Symptoms Moderate the Impact of Emotional Context Processing on Community Functioning of Individuals with SchizophreniaOnline publication date: 26 April 2018. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar6. Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref 7. Early relationships and paranoia: Qualitative investigation of childhood experiences associated with the development of persecutory delusionsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar8. Abusive Supervision Through the Lens of Employee State ParanoiaOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar9. Emotional, cognitive and behavioral reactions to paranoid symptoms in clinical and nonclinical populationsOnline publication date: 20 June 2014. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar10. The Role of Predisposition to Hallucinations on Non-Clinical Paranoid vs. Socially Anxious Individuals after Hearing Negative Affective-Laden Sounds: An Experimental InvestigationOnline publication date: 13 September 2012. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar11. Depressive Primes Stimulate Initial Avoidance of Angry Faces: An Eye-Tracking Study of Paranoid IdeationOnline publication date: 7 September 2011. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar12. Theory of mind, facial recognition and emotional processing in schizophreniaOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar13. Teoría de la mente, reconocimiento facial y procesamiento emocional en la esquizofreniaOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar14. The Cognitive–Affective Processing System (CAPS) approach to personality and the concept of personality disorder: Integrating clinical and social-cognitive researchOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar15. On the Power of Music to Affect Intergroup RelationsOnline publication date: 1 March 2009. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar16. Cognitive and emotional differences between abusive and non-abusive fathersOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar17. Thought suppression and persecutory delusion-like beliefs in a nonclinical sampleOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar18. ReferencesOnline publication date: 9 May 2008. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar19. Subtypes of paranoia in a nonclinical sampleOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar20. Paranoid cognitions, failure, and focus of attention in college studentsOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar21. Relationships Between Hostility, Affective Ratings of Pictures, and State Affects During Task-Induced StressOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar22. Paranoia and emotion perception across the continuumOnline publication date: 24 December 2010. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar23. Perceived Racism as a Predictor of Paranoia Among African AmericansOnline publication date: 25 July 2016. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar24. Social cognitive bias and neurocognitive deficit in paranoid symptoms: evidence for an interaction effect and changes during treatmentOnline publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar25. Implicit learning and non-clinical paranoia: does content matter?Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar26. Ethnic differences in subclinical paranoia: An expansion of norms of the Paranoia Scale.Online publication date: 1 January 2002. Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar27. Cultural mistrust: An important psychological construct for diagnosis and treatment of African Americans.Online publication date: Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar Volume 16Issue 1Mar 1997 Information© 1997 Guilford Publications Inc.PDF download