“…For clinical descriptions of self-disorders in schizophrenia spectrum disorders, see Parnas and Handest (2003), Parnas et al (2005a), Henriksen and Parnas (2012), and Henriksen and Nordgaard (2016). During the last two decades, empirical research on self-disorders consistently demonstrate: (i) that self-disorders hyper-aggregate in schizophrenia spectrum disorders but not in other mental disorders, including bipolar disorder (Parnas et al, 2003; Parnas et al, 2005b; Raballo et al, 2011; Haug et al, 2012; Raballo and Parnas, 2012; Nordgaard and Parnas, 2014), (ii) that self-disorders occur in genetically high-risk individuals (Raballo and Parnas, 2011), (iii) that self-disorders are temporarily stable over a 5-year period (Nordgaard et al, 2017); and finally (iv) prospective studies indicate that self-disorders predict transition to psychosis in an Ultra-High Risk for psychosis sample (Nelson et al, 2012) and that high baseline scores of self-disorders predict later transition to a schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis (Parnas et al, 2011, 2016)—for a review see Parnas and Henriksen (2014). Recently, self-disorders have been empirically explored as an intermediate phenotype of schizophrenia.…”