State paranoia and urban cycling
State paranoia and urban cycling
Consistent with a continuum approach to mental health, a growing body of research has established that paranoia occurs in the general population. The stress-vulnerability model would predict an association between environments high in threat and the presence of state paranoia, even in those with low dispositional trait paranoia. The present research examines whether urban cycling, a naturalistic environment high in interpersonal threat, is associated with state paranoia – operationalised as an explicit perception that other road users intend the agent harm. 323 members of the general population who regularly cycled in London completed measures of state and trait paranoia, anxiety, depression and stress. The majority of the general population sample (70%) reported experiencing state paranoia during urban cycling, and there was no association between state paranoia and trait paranoia. Reported state paranoia was higher during urban cycling than when using the London underground (a lower threat environment) and reported state paranoia on the underground was associated with trait paranoia. The findings are consistent with the stress-vulnerability model of everyday paranoia.
Cycling, Emotion, Health, Individual differences, Paranoia, Urban environment
341-344
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Kingston, Jessica
0a6d15b9-5390-4996-91c9-ef4be2bde1b7
Chadwick, Paul
13a767ec-4c8d-467b-85df-ca04a8d11a8e
August 2018
Ellett, Lyn
96482ea6-04b6-4a50-a7ec-ae0a3abc20ca
Kingston, Jessica
0a6d15b9-5390-4996-91c9-ef4be2bde1b7
Chadwick, Paul
13a767ec-4c8d-467b-85df-ca04a8d11a8e
Abstract
Consistent with a continuum approach to mental health, a growing body of research has established that paranoia occurs in the general population. The stress-vulnerability model would predict an association between environments high in threat and the presence of state paranoia, even in those with low dispositional trait paranoia. The present research examines whether urban cycling, a naturalistic environment high in interpersonal threat, is associated with state paranoia – operationalised as an explicit perception that other road users intend the agent harm. 323 members of the general population who regularly cycled in London completed measures of state and trait paranoia, anxiety, depression and stress. The majority of the general population sample (70%) reported experiencing state paranoia during urban cycling, and there was no association between state paranoia and trait paranoia. Reported state paranoia was higher during urban cycling than when using the London underground (a lower threat environment) and reported state paranoia on the underground was associated with trait paranoia. The findings are consistent with the stress-vulnerability model of everyday paranoia.
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Accepted_Manuscript
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Published date: August 2018
Keywords:
Cycling, Emotion, Health, Individual differences, Paranoia, Urban environment
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 453655
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453655
ISSN: 0165-1781
PURE UUID: e15e7449-ec4b-4209-b87e-9a3046618396
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Date deposited: 20 Jan 2022 17:44
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:03
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Author:
Jessica Kingston
Author:
Paul Chadwick
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