“…In more detail, cognitive impairments that are common in patients with psychosis are also found along the psychosis dimension, although less severe, such as in individuals with a schizotypal personality disorder [see Reichenberg and Harvey, , for overview] and individuals from the general population scoring relatively high on self‐report schizotypy questionnaires (Poreh et al ., ; Laurent et al ., ; Vollema and Postma, ; Burch et al ., ; Krabbendam et al ., ). Most important to the present study, cognitive functions relying on the frontal lobes such as cognitive flexibility (Voglmaier et al ., ; Diforio et al ., ; Laurent et al ., ; Blanchard et al ., ), working memory (Park and McTigue, ; Voglmaier et al ., ; Kopp et al ., ; Voglmaier et al ., ), verbal memory (Burch et al ., ; Kaczorowski et al ., ) and verbal fluency (Laurent et al ., ; Tsakanikos and Claridge, ) seem attenuated along the psychosis spectrum including schizotypy (see also Reichenberg and Harvey, , for overview).…”