Literature DB >> 11343874

Conditioned blocking and schizophrenia: a replication and study of the role of symptoms, age, onset-age of psychosis and illness-duration.

S Bender1, B Müller, R D Oades, G Sartory.   

Abstract

Measures of selective attention processing like latent inhibition (LI) and conditioned blocking (CB) are disturbed in some patients with schizophrenia. [LI is the delay in learning about the associations of a stimulus that has been associated with no event (versus de novo learning); CB is the delay in learning the associations of a stimulus-component when the other component has already started to acquire these associations.] We proposed: (1) to replicate the reported decreases of CB in patients without paranoid-hallucinatory symptoms; (2) to see if CB depends on the age of illness-onset and its duration, as reported for LI. We studied 101 young and old, acute and chronically ill patients with schizophrenia, of whom 62 learned a modified 'mouse-in-house' CB task, and compared them with 62 healthy controls matched for age, education and socio-economic background. CB was more evident in patients with a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia than other subtypes. An unusual persistence of high CB scores through testing was associated with productive symptoms (including positive thought disorder). Reduced CB related to the expression of (a) Schneider's first rank symptoms of ideas-of-reference and (b) to negative symptoms like poor rapport and poor attention. CB was less evident in the older patients and those with an earlier illness-onset. In contrast to the similar LI test of selective attention, CB is found in patients with paranoid schizophrenia and its expression is not related closely to illness duration. This implies that the two tests reflect the activity of different underlying processes. We suggest that reduced CB on initial test-trials in nonparanoid schizophrenia reflects the unusual persistence of controlled information processing strategies that would normally become automatic during conditioning. In contrast, continued CB during testing reflects an unusual persistence of automatic processing strategies.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11343874     DOI: 10.1016/s0920-9964(00)00040-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Schizophr Res        ISSN: 0920-9964            Impact factor:   4.939


  9 in total

1.  Associative blocking to reward-predicting cues is attenuated in ketamine users but can be modulated by images associated with drug use.

Authors:  Tom P Freeman; Celia J A Morgan; Fiona Pepper; Oliver D Howes; James M Stone; H Valerie Curran
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2012-07-25       Impact factor: 4.530

2.  Effects of age of onset on clinical characteristics in schizophrenia spectrum disorders.

Authors:  Yu-Chen Kao; Yia-Ping Liu
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2010-08-18       Impact factor: 3.630

3.  Kamin blocking is associated with reduced medial-frontal gyrus activation: implications for prediction error abnormality in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Paula M Moran; Jennifer L Rouse; Benjamin Cross; Rhiannon Corcoran; Martin Schürmann
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-08-31       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Neuropsychological measures of attention and memory function in schizophrenia: relationships with symptom dimensions and serum monoamine activity.

Authors:  Robert D Oades; Bernd Röpcke; Uwe Henning; Ansgard Klimke
Journal:  Behav Brain Funct       Date:  2005-08-09       Impact factor: 3.759

Review 5.  Accounting for individual differences in human associative learning.

Authors:  Nicola C Byrom
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-09-04

6.  Selectivity in associative learning: a cognitive stage framework for blocking and cue competition phenomena.

Authors:  Yannick Boddez; Kim Haesen; Frank Baeyens; Tom Beckers
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-11-12

7.  Evidence of absence: no relationship between behaviourally measured prediction error response and schizotypy.

Authors:  Clara S Humpston; Lisa H Evans; Christoph Teufel; Niklas Ihssen; David E J Linden
Journal:  Cogn Neuropsychiatry       Date:  2017-07-11       Impact factor: 1.871

8.  When to hold that thought: an experimental study showing reduced inhibition of pre-trained associations in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Zhimin He; Helen J Cassaday; S Bert G Park; Charlotte Bonardi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-07-30       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 9.  The prediction-error hypothesis of schizophrenia: new data point to circuit-specific changes in dopamine activity.

Authors:  Samuel J Millard; Carrie E Bearden; Katherine H Karlsgodt; Melissa J Sharpe
Journal:  Neuropsychopharmacology       Date:  2021-09-29       Impact factor: 7.853

  9 in total

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