Who Has Anomalous Experiences Today? Evidence for the Highly Sensitive Person Paradox
Fecha
2025-06-06Estado
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
Este estudio analiza la relación entre los rasgos de persona altamente sensible (HSP) y las experiencias anómalas (APP) en el marco del Modelo de Continuo de Psicosis (PCM). Con una muestra de 1.215 adultos españoles, se evalúa el Modelo Integrado de Sensibilidad-Temperamento de la Experiencia Anómala (ITSTAE), que combina variables de temperamento, sensibilidad y rasgos psicóticos. Los resultados muestran que los rasgos HSP no incrementan las experiencias anómalas; al contrario, cuando se introducen en el PCM, la sensibilidad actúa como un factor protector. El modelo explicó el 61,4 % de la varianza en APP, confirmando que la sensibilidad puede ser una forma de complejidad psicológica protectora frente a la psicopatología. Anomalous experiences are often viewed as red flags for psychosis—yet many individuals who report them show no signs of clinical disorder. This study reveals a
paradox: traits associated with the Highly Sensitive Person (HSP) do not increase
Anomalous Perceived Phenomena (APP). Instead, when considered within the Psychosis Continuum Model (PCM), sensitivity appears to act as a suppressor. Drawing on data
from 1215 adults, we tested the Integrated Temperamental-Sensitivity Theory of Anomalous Experience (ITSTAE), a multifactorial model integrating temperament, HSP traits,
and PCM dynamics. As expected, psychotic traits predicted higher APP scores.
However, HSP traits only became predictive when moderated by PCM—and notably,
the effect was negative. The more sensitive the individual, the fewer anomalous
perceptions they reported under psychotic pressure. Structural Equation Modeling
(SEM) confirmed the model’s fit, with explained variance in APP rising from 47.1% to
61.4% when PCM mediation was included. Multitrait-Multimethod (MTMM) analyses
further validated the conceptual independence of HSP and PCM. These findings
challenge psychiatric reductionism and suggest a more nuanced, non-pathologizing lens
on altered perception. Far from signaling fragility, heightened sensitivity may serve as a
buffer—a cognitive shield—against psychosis-linked anomalous experiences. This
model reframes sensitivity not as vulnerability, but as a form of psychological
complexity
Who Has Anomalous Experiences Today? Evidence for the Highly Sensitive Person Paradox
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
0033-2941Palabras Clave
Temperamento, experiencias anómalas, persona altamente sensible, psicosis, modelo de sensibilidad, percepción, teoría ITSTAE.Temperament, psychosis continuum model, paranormal beliefs, anomalous experiences, highly sensitive person

