| Literature DB >> 29179910 |
Christian Rominger1, Günter Schulter2, Andreas Fink2, Elisabeth M Weiss2, Ilona Papousek2.
Abstract
Perception of objectively independent events or stimuli as being significantly connected and the associated proneness to perceive meaningful patterns constitute part of the positive symptoms of schizophrenia, which are associated with altered attentional processes in lateralized speech perception. Since perceiving meaningful patterns is to some extent already prevalent in the general population, the aim of the study was to investigate whether the propensity to experience meaningful patterns in co-occurring events and random stimuli may be associated with similar altered attentional processes in lateralized speech perception. Self-reported and behavioral indicators of the perception of meaningful patterns were assessed in non-clinical individuals, along with EEG auditory evoked potentials during the performance of an attention related lateralized speech perception task (Dichotic Listening Test). A greater propensity to perceive meaningful patterns was associated with higher N1 amplitudes of the evoked potentials to the onset of the dichotically presented consonant-vowel syllables, indicating enhanced automatic attention in early sensory processing. The study suggests that more basic mechanisms in how people associate events may play a greater role in the cognitive biases that are manifest in personality expressions such as positive schizotypy, rather than that positive schizotypy moderates these cognitive biases directly.Entities:
Keywords: Apophenia; Dichotic Listening Test; Lateralized speech perception; Meaningful coincidences; Positive schizotypy
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29179910 DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2017.07.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res ISSN: 0165-1781 Impact factor: 3.222