| Literature DB >> 31781821 |
Lauren Harper1, Emily Spencer1, Colin Davidson2, Claire V Hutchinson3.
Abstract
Deficits in the ability to encode small differences in contrast between adjacent parts of an image (contrast sensitivity) are well documented in schizophrenic patients. In the present study, we sought to determine whether contrast sensitivity deficits reported in schizophrenic patients are also evident in those who exhibit high schizotypy scores in a typical (i.e., non-schizophrenic) population. Using the O-Life Questionnaire, we determined the effects of schizotypy on spatial (0.5, 2 and 8 c/deg) and spatiotemporal (0.5 and 8 c/deg at 0.5 and 8 Hz) contrast sensitivity in 73 young (18-26 years), majority female (n = 68) participants. We found differences in contrast sensitivity that were spatial, spatiotemporal and O-Life subscale specific. Spatial contrast sensitivity was significantly lower in high, compared to low schizotypes at low spatial frequencies (0.5 c/deg) in those who scored highly on the Unusual Experiences and Cognitive Disorganisation O-Life subscales. For moving stimuli, individuals with high scores on the Unusual Experiences subscale exhibited lower spatiotemporal contrast sensitivity for 0.5 and 8 c/deg patterns drifting at 8 Hz. Although the effects reported here were relatively small, this is the first report of reduced contrast sensitivity in schizotypy.Entities:
Keywords: Psychosis proneness; Schizotypy; Spatial frequency; Temporal frequency; Vision
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31781821 PMCID: PMC6957544 DOI: 10.1007/s00221-019-05695-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Brain Res ISSN: 0014-4819 Impact factor: 1.972
Summary of the effects of schizophrenia on conventional contrast sensitivity for stationary and moving grating patterns
| Study | Groups | Spatial and temporal frequencies tested | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slaghuis ( | 30 schizophrenic patients, 15 controls | 1 and 8 c/deg | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients at both spatial frequencies compared to controls |
| Chen et al. ( | 15 schizophrenic patients, 18 controls | 0.5 c/deg; 0, 5 Hz | No difference in CS between patients and controls |
| Keri et al. ( | 20 schizophrenic patients, 15 controls | 0.5, 1.2, 1.9, 2.9, 3.6, 4.8, 5.7, 7.2 and 14.4 c/deg, 0, 8 Hz | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients across all conditions compared to controls For stationary patterns, deficits were most pronounced at spatial frequencies above 2 c/deg |
| Chen et al. ( | 45 schizophrenic patients: 8 prescribed typical antipsychotics, 25 prescribed atypical antipsychotics, 6 prescribed combination typical and atypical antipsychotics, 8 not prescribed antipsychotics–although 3 of these were taking SSRIs, 24 first degree relatives, 39 controls | 0.5 c/deg, 0.5 Hz | Reduced CS in the schizophrenic group compared to controls Reduced CS in patients prescribed typical antipsychotics than patients prescribed atypical antipsychotics and controls Better CS in patients not prescribed antipsychotics compared to controls No differences between: (i) patients prescribed atypical antipsychotics and controls; (ii) patients prescribed a combination of typical and atypical antipsychotics and those prescribed only atypical antipsychotics, only typical antipsychotics, or controls; (iii) first degree relatives and controls |
| Slaghuis ( | 28 schizophrenic patients (14 positive symptom patients, 14 negative symptom patients), 14 controls | 0.5, 2, 4, 8 c/deg; 0, 4, 8, 16 Hz | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients but only those assigned to the ‘negative symptom’ group |
| Butler et al. ( | 33 schizophrenic patients, 21 controls | 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 7, 10, 21 c/deg | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients at spatial frequencies below 7 c/deg compared to controls |
| Cimmer et al. ( | 44 schizophrenic patients, 20 controls | 0.5 c/deg, 8 Hz | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients compared to controls |
| Butler et al. ( | 20 schizophrenic patients, 17 controls | 0.5, 7, 21 c/deg | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients at 0.5 c/deg compared to controls |
| Calderone et al. ( | 15 schizophrenic patients, 15 controls | 0.5, 4 c/deg | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients compared to controls |
| Cadenhead et al. ( | 53 schizophrenic patients, 22 schizotypal personality disorder, 53 controls. | 1.22 c/deg, 8.33 Hz | Reduced CS in schizophrenic patients and those with schizotypal personality disorder compared to controls |
| Shoshina et al. ( | 45 schizophrenic patients (25 treated with antipsychotics blocking serotonin and dopamine receptors, 20 treated with antipsychotics blocking dopamine receptor), 20 controls | 0.4, 3.6, 17.9 c/deg | Reduced CS at 0.4 and 3.6 c/deg for both patient groups compared to controls Patients prescribed serotonin and dopamine receptor blockers had a larger deficit at 0.4 c/deg. Patients prescribed dopamine receptor blockers had a larger deficit at 3.6 and 17.9 c/deg |
| Samani et al. ( | 24 schizophrenics 44 controls | 0.5, 2, 8 c/deg | Reduced CS at 0.5 c/deg compared to controls. |
0 Hz indicates that patterns were stationary
CS contrast sensitivity
Mean (with lower (c) and upper ( + ) 95% confidence intervals) and median contrast thresholds (in the range 0–1) at 0.5, 2 and 8 c/deg for high and low schizotypes on each O-Life subscale
| Spatial frequency | Subscale | Score | Mean (± 95% CIs) | Median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.0092 ( − CI: 0.0052; + CI: 0.0132) | 0.0057 |
| Low | 0.0049 ( − CI: 0.0043; + CI: 0.0055) | 0.0046 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.0090 ( − CI: 0.0049; + CI:0.0132) | 0.0052 | |
| Low | 0.0049 ( − CI: 0.0043; + CI:0.0056) | 0.0047 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.0075 ( − CI: 0.0043; + CI: 0.0107) | 0.0053 | |
| Low | 0.0050 ( − CI: 0.0045; + CI: 0.0055) | 0.0049 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.0074 ( − CI: 0.0044; + CI: 0.0105) | 0.0052 | |
| Low | 0.0071 ( − CI: 0.00355; + CI: 0.0108) | 0.0053 | ||
| 2 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.0024 ( − CI: 0.0022; + CI: 0.0028) | 0.0023 |
| Low | 0.0027 ( − CI: 0.0023; + CI: 0.0032) | 0.0024 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.0024 ( − CI: 0.0022; + CI:0.0027) | 0.0022 | |
| Low | 0.0027 ( − CI: 0.0023; + CI:0.0032) | 0.0024 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.0026 ( − CI: 0.0022; + CI: 0.0031) | 0.0024 | |
| Low | 0.0024 ( − CI: 0.0022; + CI: 0.0026) | 0.0024 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.0024 ( − CI: 0.0022; + CI:0.0026) | 0.0022 | |
| Low | 0.0025 ( − CI: 0.0023; + CI: 0.0028) | 0.0024 | ||
| 8 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.0077 ( − CI: 0.0062; + CI: 0.0093) | 0.0065 |
| Low | 0.0098 ( − CI: 0.0043; + CI: 0.0153) | 0.0058 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.0079 ( − CI: 0.0057; + CI:0.0102) | 0.0054 | |
| Low | 0.0075 ( − CI: 0.0062; + CI:0.0089) | 0.0058 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.0072 ( − CI: 0.0060; + CI: 0.0084) | 0.0058 | |
| Low | 0.0109 ( − CI: 0.0043; + CI: 0.0174) | 0.0058 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.0098 ( − CI: 0.0043; + CI: 0.0152) | 0.0065 | |
| Low | 0.0079 ( − CI: 0.0054; + CI: 0.0106) | 0.0056 |
Fig. 1Mean contrast sensitivity at 0.5, 2 and 8 c/deg for those who scored ‘high’ (open symbols) and ‘low’ (closed symbols) on each O-Life subscale: a unusual experiences, b cognitive disorganisation, c introverted anhedonia and d impulsive non-conformity. Error bars are ± 1 SEM
Fig. 2Box and whisker plots showing minimum, 1st quartile, median, 3rd quartile and maximum contrast sensitivity at 0.5 c/deg for those who scored ‘high’ or ‘low’ on the a unusual experiences and b cognitive disorganisation subscales of the O-Life Questionnaire
Fig. 3Individual scores on the a unusual experiences and b cognitive disorganisation subscales of the O-Life questionnaire against contrast sensitivity scores at 0.5 c/deg
Mean (with lower ( − ) and upper ( + ) 95% confidence intervals) and median contrast thresholds (in the range 0-1) for 0.5 and 8 c/deg patterns drifting at 0.5 Hz for each O-Life subscale
| Spatial frequency | Subscale | Schizotypy group | Mean (± 95% CIs) | Median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.0064 ( − CI: 0.0047; + CI: 0.0080) | 0.0047 |
| Low | 0.0064 ( − CI: 0.0036; + CI: 0.0091) | 0.0047 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.0057 ( − CI: 0.0040; + CI:0.0073) | 0.0046 | |
| Low | 0.0066 ( − CI: 0.0038; + CI: 0.0094) | 0.0048 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.0064 ( − CI: 0.0037; + CI: 0.0091) | 0.0047 | |
| Low | 0.0059 ( − CI: 0.0044; + CI: 0.0073) | 0.0047 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.0056 ( − CI: 0.0041; + CI: 0.0070) | 0.0047 | |
| Low | 0.0058 ( − CI: 0.0042; + CI: 0.0074) | 0.0046 | ||
| 8 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.6604 ( − CI: 0.5271; + CI: 0.7937) | 0.8933 |
| Low | 0.6561 ( − CI: 0.5182; + CI: 0.7940) | 0.8242 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.6138 ( − CI: 0.4780; + CI: 0.7495) | 0.7145 | |
| Low | 0.7565 ( − CI: 0.6299; + CI: 0.8830) | 0.9663 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.6400 ( − CI: 0.4975; + CI: 0.7825) | 0.8612 | |
| Low | 0.6277 ( − CI: 0.4827; + CI: 0.7727) | 0.7732 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.6366 ( − CI: 0.4895; + CI: 0.7838) | 0.8933 | |
| Low | 0.6904 ( − CI: 0.5564; + CI: 0.8244) | 0.8242 |
Fig. 4Mean contrast sensitivity for 0.5 and 8 c/deg patterns drifting at 0.5 Hz for those who scored ‘high’ and ‘low’ on each O-Life subscale: a unusual experiences, b cognitive disorganisation, c introverted anhedonia and d impulsive non-conformity. Error bars are ± 1 S.E.M
Mean (with lower ( − ) and upper ( + ) 95% confidence intervals) and median contrast thresholds (in the range 0–1) for 0.5 and 8 c/deg patterns drifting at 8 Hz for each O-Life subscale
| Spatial frequency | Subscale | Schizotypy group | Mean (± 95% CIs) | Median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.013 ( − CI: 0.0004; +CI: 0.0256) | 0.0019 |
| Low | 0.0026 ( − CI: 0.0018; +CI: 0.0032) | 0.0019 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.0069 ( − CI: 0.0006; + CI:0.0133) | 0.0018 | |
| Low | 0.0027 ( − CI: 0.0017; + CI: 0.0036) | 0.0018 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.0029 ( − CI: 0.0015; + CI: 0.0044) | 0.0018 | |
| Low | 0.0128 ( − CI: 0.0022; + CI: 0.0278) | 0.0019 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.0099 ( − CI: 0.0026; + CI: 0.0224) | 0.0018 | |
| Low | 0.0064 ( − CI: 0.0002; + CI: 0.0126) | 0.0019 | ||
| 8 c/deg | Unusual experiences | High | 0.1814 ( − CI: 0.0648; + CI: 0.2979) | 0.0106 |
| Low | 0.1202 ( − CI: 0.0231; + CI: 0.2174) | 0.0077 | ||
| Cognitive disorganisation | High | 0.1395 ( − CI: 0.0297; + CI: 0.2493) | 0.0095 | |
| Low | 0.1131 ( − CI: 0.0217; + CI: 0.2044) | 0.0098 | ||
| Introverted anhedonia | High | 0.1144 ( − CI: 0.0250; + CI: 0.2038) | 0.0092 | |
| Low | 0.1935 ( − CI: 0.0604; + CI: 0.3266) | 0.0135 | ||
| Impulsive nonconformity | High | 0.1072 ( − CI: 0.0165; + CI: 0.1979) | 0.0087 | |
| Low | 0.1677 ( − CI: 0.0469; + CI: 0.2885) | 0.0134 |
Fig. 5Mean contrast sensitivity for 0.5 and 8 c/deg patterns drifting at 8 Hz for those who scored ‘high’ and ‘low’ on each O-Life subscale: a unusual experiences, b cognitive disorganisation, c introverted anhedonia and d impulsive non-conformity. Error bars are ± 1 S.E.M
Fig. 6Box and whisker plots showing minimum, 1st quartile, median, 3rd quartile and maximum contrast sensitivity at a 0.5 c/deg and b 8 c/deg for patterns drfiting at 8 Hz in those who scored ‘high’ or ‘low’ on the unusual experiences subscale of the O-Life questionnaire