Symptoms & Concepts
Schizophrenia
Other Psychotic Disorders
Causes & Risk Factors
Treatment & Diagnosis
100

Hearing voices or seeing things that aren’t there.

Hallucinations

100

Hallucinations, delusions, and disorganized behavior are examples of these symptoms.

Positive symptoms

100

Psychotic symptoms lasting between 1 day and 1 month.

Brief Psychotic Disorder

100

This neurotransmitter system is most associated with schizophrenia.

Dopamine

100

The primary class of medications used to treat psychotic symptoms.

Antipsychotics

200

A fixed, false belief that is not based in reality.

Delusion

200

Symptoms must persist for this minimum duration for a schizophrenia diagnosis.

Six months

200

Delusions lasting at least 1 month but with otherwise normal functioning.

Delusional Disorder

200

Having a close biological relative with schizophrenia increases this.

Genetic risk

200

This type of therapy helps patients challenge delusional thinking and manage symptoms.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

300

Disorganized, jumbled, or incoherent way of speaking.

Disorganized speech

300

The period before full psychosis develops, often involving subtle changes in behavior.

Prodromal phase

300

Symptoms of schizophrenia plus major mood episodes.

Schizoaffective Disorder

300

Prenatal exposure to viruses or complications during pregnancy increase this type of vulnerability.

Environmental risk

300

The manual used by mental health professionals to diagnose psychotic disorders.

DSM-5

400

Reduced emotional expression, flat affect, and social withdrawal fall under this symptom category.

Negative symptoms

400

One of the most common types of hallucinations in schizophrenia.

Auditory hallucinations

400

Psychosis lasting 1–6 months that does not yet meet full schizophrenia criteria.

Schizophreniform Disorder

400

Stressful life events can trigger or worsen symptoms through this psychological model.

Stress-vulnerability model

400

These medications block dopamine receptors to reduce hallucinations and delusions.

Typical or atypical antipsychotics

500

Jumping rapidly between unrelated topics when speaking.

Loose associations

500

The cognitive domain most often impaired in schizophrenia, affecting memory and attention.

Executive functioning

500

Disorder caused by substance use leading to hallucinations or delusions.

Substance/Medication-Induced Psychotic Disorder

500

Early childhood trauma can contribute to the development of these types of symptoms.

Psychotic or dissociative symptoms

500

A long-term treatment approach involving social skills, support, and community-based services.

Psychosocial rehabilitation