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. 2025 Jul 22;11(4):e154.
doi: 10.1192/bjo.2025.10775.

The impact of religiosity, anxiety and depression on proneness to auditory hallucinations in healthy individuals

Affiliations

The impact of religiosity, anxiety and depression on proneness to auditory hallucinations in healthy individuals

Chiara Lucafò et al. BJPsych Open. .

Abstract

Background: Auditory hallucinations (hearing voices in the absence of physical stimuli) are present in clinical conditions, but they are also experienced less frequently by healthy individuals. In the non-clinical population, auditory hallucinations are described more often as positive and not intrusive; indeed, they have received less attention.

Aims: The present study explores the phenomenology of non-clinical auditory hallucinations and their possible relationship with religiosity.

Method: Starting from previous findings suggesting that non-clinical auditory hallucinations are often described as a gift or a way to be connected with 'someone else', we administered standardised questionnaires to quantify proneness to experiencing auditory hallucinations, religiosity and anxiety/depression scores.

Results: Regression analysis carried out using an auditory hallucinations, index as the dependent variable on a final sample of 680 responders revealed that a total of 31% of the variance was explained by a five-steps model including demographic characteristics (i.e. being young, a woman and a non-believer) and negative (e.g. being afraid of otherworldly punishments) and positive (e.g. believing in benevolent supernatural forces) components of religiosity, anxiety and depression. Crucially, compared with believers, non-believers revealed higher scores in depression, anxiety and in a specific questionnaire measuring proneness to auditory hallucinations.

Conclusions: Results suggests that religiosity acts as a potential protective factor for proneness to paranormal experiences, but a complex relationship emerges between religious beliefs, mood alterations and unusual experiences.

Keywords: Auditory hallucinations; anxiety; depression; religiosity; voice hearing.

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Conflict of interest statement

None.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Distribution plots for auditory hallucinations questionnaires. The thick horizontal line indicates the median; the box indicates the interquartile range (IQR); the whiskers indicate extreme data points not exceeding the IQR by1.5; outliers are plotted as dots. CAPS, Cardiff Anomalous Perceptions Scale; O-LIFE, Oxford–Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences; AHRS, Auditory Hallucinations Rating Scale; HPSVQ, Hamilton Program for Schizophrenia Voices Questionnaire.

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