Auditory Hallucinations and Self-Injurious Behavior in General Population Adolescents: Modeling Within-Person Effects in the Tokyo Teen Cohort

Schizophr Bull. 2023 Mar 15;49(2):329-338. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbac155.

Abstract

Background and hypotheses: A wealth of evidence suggests that adolescent psychotic experiences (PEs), and especially auditory hallucinations (AHs), are associated with an increased risk for self-injurious behavior (SIB). However, the directionality and specificity of this association are not well understood, and there are no published studies investigating within-person effects over time. The present study aimed to test whether AHs and SIB prospectively increase reciprocal risk at the individual level during early-to-middle adolescence.

Study design: Three waves (12y, 14y, and 16y) of self-reported AHs and SIB data from a large Tokyo-based adolescent birth cohort (N = 2825) were used. Random Intercept Cross-Lagged Panel Model (RI-CLPM) analysis was conducted to test the within-person prospective associations between AHs and SIB.

Study results: At the within-person level, AHs were associated with subsequent SIB over the observation period (12y-14y: β = .118, P < .001; 14-16y: β = .086, P = .012). The reverse SIB->AHs relationship was non-significant at 12-14y (β = .047, P = .112) but emerged from 14y to 16y as the primary direction of influence (β = .243, P < .001). Incorporating depression as a time-varying covariate did not meaningfully alter model estimates.

Conclusions: A complex bi-directional pattern of relationships was observed between AHs and SIB over the measurement period, and these relationships were independent of depressive symptoms. Adolescent AHs may be both a predictor of later SIB and also a manifestation of SIB-induced psychological distress.

Keywords: RI-CLPM; prospective cohort; psychotic experiences; psychotic symptoms; self-harm.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Hallucinations / epidemiology
  • Hallucinations / etiology
  • Hallucinations / psychology
  • Humans
  • Mental Disorders*
  • Self-Injurious Behavior* / epidemiology
  • Tokyo