Spirituality, dimensional autism, and schizotypal traits: The search for meaning
Bernard J. Crespi, Natalie L. Dinsdale, Silven Read, Peter L. Hurd
PLoS ONE March 8, 2019 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213456 via OpenAlex
Summary
Spirituality relates differently to autism spectrum and schizotypal spectrum traits in opposite directions. In a large undergraduate sample, total spirituality scores were negatively correlated with autism traits and positively correlated with positive schizotypal traits, supporting the diametrical model of autism and psychosis. These opposite associations were driven mainly by the Search for Meaning subscale, which was negatively linked to autism and positively linked to positive schizotypal traits. Belief in God was positively correlated with positive schizotypal traits but unrelated to autism traits. Results align with cognitive theories of weak central coherence in autism and enhanced salience in schizotypy.
Study at a glance
| Design | cross-sectional study |
|---|---|
| Population | undergraduate students |
| Key finding | Spirituality, particularly the Search for Meaning dimension, is negatively associated with autism traits and positively associated with positive schizotypal traits, consistent with the diametrical model of autism and psychosis. |
Abstract
The relationships of spirituality with human social cognition, as exemplified in autism spectrum and schizophrenia spectrum cognitive variation, remain largely unstudied. We quantified non-clinical levels of autism spectrum and schizotypal spectrum traits (using the Autism Quotient and the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire-Brief Revised) and dimensions of spirituality (using the Hardt Spirituality Questionnaire) in a large sample of undergraduate students. We tested in particular the hypothesis, based on the diametrical model of autism and psychosis, that autism should be negatively associated, and positive schizotypal traits should be positively associated, with spirituality. Our primary findings were threefold. First, in support of the diametric model, total Spirituality score was significantly negatively correlated with total Autism Quotient score, and significantly positively correlated with Positive Schizotypal traits (the Schizotypal Personality Cognitive-Perceptual subscale), as predicted. Second, these associations were driven mainly by opposite patterns regarding the Search for Meaning Spirituality subscale, which was the only subscale that was significantly negatively associated with autism, and significantly positively associated with Positive Schizotypal traits. Third, Belief in God was positively correlated with Positive Schizotypal traits, but was uncorrelated with autism traits. The opposite findings for Search for Meaning can be interpreted in the contexts of well-supported cognitive models for understanding autism in terms of weak central coherence, and understanding Positive Schizotypal traits in terms of enhanced salience.