Mohammed Kalathil Shakeel1, Nancy Marsh Docherty. 1. Schizophrenia Research Lab., Department of Psychology, Kent State University, P.O. Box 5190, Kent, OH 44242-000, USA. mshakeel@kent.edu
Abstract
RATIONALE: Source monitoring (SM) is a metacognitive process involved in making judgments about the origin of information by recruiting cognitive processes. Deficits in SM have been linked to positive symptoms of schizophrenia. We investigated whether certain neurocognitive functions - specifically attention, working memory, and organizational sequencing - were associated with SM in a sample of schizophrenia patients. METHODS: Attention (Auditory Continuous Performance Test), organizational sequencing (Trail-Making Test B-A), working memory (Digits Backward), and internal SM were assessed in 45 outpatients diagnosed with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. RESULTS: Standard multiple regression analysis showed attention, working memory and organizational sequencing together predicted SM. Organizational sequencing was the only significant individual predictor, with better organizational sequencing ability being associated with better SM. Hierarchical regression analysis showed that working memory by itself did not result in a significant predictive model of SM, but adding organizational sequencing led to a significant change from the working memory model and resulted in a significant overall model, accounting for 26% of the variance in SM. CONCLUSIONS: Neurocognitive functions were associated with SM in schizophrenia. Organizational sequencing, which requires an awareness of self-generated actions, predicted SM performance even after controlling for working memory.
RATIONALE: Source monitoring (SM) is a metacognitive process involved in making judgments about the origin of information by recruiting cognitive processes. Deficits in SM have been linked to positive symptoms of schizophrenia. We investigated whether certain neurocognitive functions - specifically attention, working memory, and organizational sequencing - were associated with SM in a sample of schizophreniapatients. METHODS: Attention (Auditory Continuous Performance Test), organizational sequencing (Trail-Making Test B-A), working memory (Digits Backward), and internal SM were assessed in 45 outpatients diagnosed with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. RESULTS: Standard multiple regression analysis showed attention, working memory and organizational sequencing together predicted SM. Organizational sequencing was the only significant individual predictor, with better organizational sequencing ability being associated with better SM. Hierarchical regression analysis showed that working memory by itself did not result in a significant predictive model of SM, but adding organizational sequencing led to a significant change from the working memory model and resulted in a significant overall model, accounting for 26% of the variance in SM. CONCLUSIONS: Neurocognitive functions were associated with SM in schizophrenia. Organizational sequencing, which requires an awareness of self-generated actions, predicted SM performance even after controlling for working memory.
Authors: Rodolfo Rossi; Stanley Zammit; Katherine S Button; Marcus R Munafò; Glyn Lewis; Anthony S David Journal: PLoS One Date: 2016-04-27 Impact factor: 3.240