“…Dissociation has a well-established presence in psychosis populations (Ross and Keyes, 2004;Moskowitz, 2011;Vogel et al, 2013;Renard et al, 2017;Sun et al, 2018a), and may have a pivotal role in the formation and maintenance of psychotic symptoms (Schäefer et al, 2012;Sun et al, 2018a;Freeman et al, 2019;Treise et al, 2019;Longden et al, 2020). Dissociative symptoms have been found in both longer-term psychotic illness (Ross and Keyes, 2004) and in first episode of psychosis (Sun et al, 2018b), and are mostly associated with positive symptoms, specifically delusions and hallucinations (Spitzer et al, 1997;Ross and Keyes, 2004;Kilcommons and Morrison, 2005;Lysaker and LaRocco, 2008;Schäefer et al, 2012;Vogel et al, 2013;Schroeder et al, 2016;Sun et al, 2018b;Longden et al, 2020;Varese et al, 2020). Moreover, the severity of dissociative phenomena may fluctuate in step with psychotic symptoms, with higher levels of dissociation in the acute illness phase compared to stabilization (Schäefer et al, 2012).…”