Literature DB >> 20383285

Building coherence: A framework for exploring the breakdown of links across clause boundaries in schizophrenia.

Tali Ditman1, Gina R Kuperberg.   

Abstract

Clinically, patients with schizophrenia show prominent abnormalities at the discourse level, with production characterized by tangential and illogical relationships between ideas and unclear references. Despite these clinical manifestations, most studies of language in schizophrenia have focused on semantic relationships between single words and the build-up of meaning within single-clause sentences. The present paper discusses the few studies that have gone beyond clause boundaries to fully understand language impairments in schizophrenia. We also give an overview of a relevant literature that considers the neurocognitive mechanisms by which coherence links are established across clauses in healthy adults, providing a framework that may guide future research in this area.

Entities:  

Year:  2010        PMID: 20383285      PMCID: PMC2851098          DOI: 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2009.03.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurolinguistics        ISSN: 0911-6044            Impact factor:   1.710


  94 in total

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9.  A new approach to discourse analysis in psychiatry, applied to a schizophrenic patient's speech.

Authors:  M C Noël-Jorand; M Reinert; S Giudicelli; D Dassa
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  16 in total

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2.  Hippocampal temporal-parietal junction interaction in the production of psychotic symptoms: a framework for understanding the schizophrenic syndrome.

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6.  Language in schizophrenia Part 2: What can psycholinguistics bring to the study of schizophrenia...and vice versa?

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7.  Automated analysis of written narratives reveals abnormalities in referential cohesion in youth at ultra high risk for psychosis.

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9.  Spared and impaired spoken discourse processing in schizophrenia: effects of local and global language context.

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10.  Is the comprehension of idiomatic sentences indeed impaired in paranoid Schizophrenia? A window into semantic processing deficits.

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