Literature DB >> 18484290

Context, complexity, and cognitive processing in schizophrenia.

Carmi Schooler1, Bruce Roberts, Rudolf Cohen.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cohen et al.'s (1990, 1999) concept of context has been employed to explain various schizophrenic cognitive deficits. Braver et al.'s (2001) modified definition allows us to link context to cognitive complexity and explain a range of our experimental findings.
METHOD: Saccadic and manual responses to experimental paradigms involving familiar and unfamiliar versions of tasks varying in stimulus-response compatibility, response familiarity, and temporal factors were used. These include comparison of acoustic and visually driven saccades and antisaccades, manual and saccadic pattern reproduction, and colour (cognitively guided) saccades with two delay intervals.
RESULTS: In one experiment, schizophrenic participants, unlike controls, made fewer errors on the auditory compared to the visual antisaccade task, suggesting that prepotent responses are more easily inhibited when stimulus-response compatibility is reduced. In a second experiment in which a left-right response sequence is reproduced manually or saccadically, schizophrenic performance is impaired when the novel and thus more complex saccadic response is required. In the third experiment, a colour signal is interpreted to determine the correct direction of a saccade. With two different blocked delay intervals, shortening the delay results in schizophrenic performance decline, suggesting difficulty adjusting to temporal context changes.
CONCLUSION: These results, together with our previous findings (Schooler et al., 1997a; Zahn et al., 1998) suggest schizophrenic context processing deficits become increasingly evident as contexts become more complex. These results may be due to microgaps in schizophrenic individuals' maintenance of context.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18484290     DOI: 10.1080/13546800802058658

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cogn Neuropsychiatry        ISSN: 1354-6805            Impact factor:   1.871


  3 in total

1.  Delay discounting and task performance consistency in patients with schizophrenia.

Authors:  Rosalyn Eve Weller; Kathy Burton Avsar; James Edward Cox; Meredith Amanda Reid; David Matthew White; Adrienne Carol Lahti
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 3.222

2.  Pro- and antisaccades in children elicited by visual and acoustic targets - does modality matter?

Authors:  Johanna Goepel; Stefanie C Biehl; Johanna Kissler; Isabella Paul-Jordanov
Journal:  BMC Pediatr       Date:  2011-12-16       Impact factor: 2.125

3.  An fMRI investigation of delay discounting in patients with schizophrenia.

Authors:  Kathy Burton Avsar; Rosalyn Eve Weller; James Edward Cox; Meredith Amanda Reid; David Matthew White; Adrienne Carol Lahti
Journal:  Brain Behav       Date:  2013-04-24       Impact factor: 2.708

  3 in total

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