Literature DB >> 31262709

Impaired Corollary Discharge in Psychosis and At-Risk States: Integrating Neurodevelopmental, Phenomenological, and Clinical Perspectives.

Michele Poletti1, Alfonso Tortorella2, Andrea Raballo3.   

Abstract

The brain is increasingly viewed in contemporary neuroscience as a predictive machine; its products, such as movements and decisions, are indeed accompanied by predictions of outcomes at distinct levels of awareness. In this conceptual review, we focus on corollary discharge, a basic neurophysiological mechanism that is allegedly involved in sensory prediction and contributes to the distinction between self-generated and externally generated actions. Failures in corollary discharge have been hypothesized as potentially relevant for the progressive development of positive psychotic symptoms such as passivity delusions and auditory verbal hallucinations. We articulate this framework adopting three confocal lenses, namely, the neurodevelopmental, phenomenological, and clinical perspectives. Converging evidence from these research domains indicates a possible developmental cascade leading to increased lifetime risk of psychosis. That is, early childhood alterations of corollary discharge mechanisms, endophenotypically expressed in motor impairment, may concur with a progressive fading of the feeling of self-agency on one's own experiences. Combined with other age-dependent situational challenges occurring along development, this may progressively hamper the ontogenesis of the embodied self, thereby facilitating the emergence of anomalous subjective experiences such as self-disorders (a longitudinal index of schizophrenia spectrum vulnerability) and broadly conceived clinical high-risk states. Overall, this condition increases the risk of developing passivity symptoms, phenotypically expressed in a severity gradient ranging from intrusive thoughts to passivity delusions and auditory verbal hallucinations. Empirical and clinical implications of this framework, as well as future scenarios, are discussed.
Copyright © 2019 Society of Biological Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Corollary discharge; Obsessive-compulsive disorder; Schizophrenia spectrum disorders; Self-disorders; Sense of agency; Sensory prediction

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31262709     DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2019.05.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging        ISSN: 2451-9022


  7 in total

1.  The positive dimension of schizotypy is associated with a reduced attenuation and precision of self-generated touch.

Authors:  Evridiki Asimakidou; Xavier Job; Konstantina Kilteni
Journal:  Schizophrenia (Heidelb)       Date:  2022-06-29

2.  (Developmental) Motor Signs: Reconceptualizing a Potential Transdiagnostic Marker of Psychopathological Vulnerability.

Authors:  Michele Poletti; Andrea Raballo
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 7.348

3.  Organization of primate amygdalar-thalamic pathways for emotions.

Authors:  Clare Timbie; Miguel Á García-Cabezas; Basilis Zikopoulos; Helen Barbas
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2020-02-27       Impact factor: 8.029

4.  Before Schizophrenia: Schizophrenic Vulnerability in Developmental Age and Its Detection.

Authors:  Michele Poletti; Andrea Raballo
Journal:  Clin Neuropsychiatry       Date:  2021-12

5.  The phenomenology of auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia and the challenge from pseudohallucinations.

Authors:  Pablo López-Silva; Álvaro Cavieres; Clara Humpston
Journal:  Front Psychiatry       Date:  2022-08-16       Impact factor: 5.435

6.  Timing of the Sense of Volition in Patients With Schizophrenia.

Authors:  Sarah Pirio Richardson; Antonio I Triggiani; Masao Matsuhashi; Valerie Voon; Elizabeth Peckham; Fatta Nahab; Zoltan Mari; Mark Hallett
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2020-10-30       Impact factor: 4.677

7.  The Self in the Spectrum: A Meta-analysis of the Evidence Linking Basic Self-Disorders and Schizophrenia.

Authors:  Andrea Raballo; Michele Poletti; Antonio Preti; Josef Parnas
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2021-07-08       Impact factor: 9.306

  7 in total

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