| Literature DB >> 25147080 |
Jean-Rémy Martin1, Guillaume Dezecache2, Daniel Pressnitzer3, Philippe Nuss4, Jérôme Dokic5, Nicolas Bruno6, Elisabeth Pacherie7, Nicolas Franck8.
Abstract
People with schizophrenia are known to exhibit difficulties in the updating of their current belief states even in the light of disconfirmatory evidence. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that people with schizophrenia could also manifest perceptual inflexibility, or difficulties in the updating of their current sensory states. The presence of perceptual inflexibility might contribute both to the patients' altered perception of reality and the formation of some delusions as well as to their social cognition deficits. Here, we addressed this issue with a protocol of auditory hysteresis, a direct measure of sensory persistence, on a population of stabilized antipsychotic-treated schizophrenia patients and a sample of control subjects. Trials consisted of emotional signals (i.e., screams) and neutral signals (i.e., spectrally-rotated versions of the emotional stimuli) progressively emerging from white noise - Ascending Sequences - or progressively fading away in white noise - Descending Sequences. Results showed that patients presented significantly stronger hysteresis effects than control subjects, as evidenced by a higher rate of perceptual reports in Descending Sequences. The present study thus provides direct evidence of perceptual inflexibility in schizophrenia.Entities:
Keywords: Belief inflexibility; Perceptual hysteresis; Perceptual inflexibility; Predictive deficits; Schizophrenia
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25147080 DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2014.07.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conscious Cogn ISSN: 1053-8100