| Literature DB >> 34717270 |
Abhijit M Chinchani1, Mahesh Menon2, Meighen Roes3, Heungsun Hwang4, Paul Allen5, Vaughan Bell6, Josef Bless7, Catherine Bortolon8, Matteo Cella9, Charles Fernyhough10, Jane Garrison11, Eva Kozáková12, Frank Larøi13, Jamie Moffatt14, Nicolas Say15, Mimi Suzuki16, Wei Lin Toh17, Yuliya Zaytseva18, Susan L Rossell19, Peter Moseley20, Todd S Woodward21.
Abstract
Hallucinatory experiences (HEs) can be pronounced in psychosis, but similar experiences also occur in nonclinical populations. Cognitive mechanisms hypothesized to underpin HEs include dysfunctional source monitoring, heightened signal detection, and impaired attentional processes. Using data from an international multisite study on non-clinical participants (N = 419), we described the overlap between two sets of variables - one measuring cognition and the other HEs - at the level of individual items. We used a three-step method to extract and examine item-specific signal, which is typically obscured when summary scores are analyzed using traditional methodologies. The three-step method involved: (1) constraining variance in cognition variables to that which is predictable from HE variables, followed by dimension reduction, (2) determining reliable HE items using split-halves and permutation tests, and (3) selecting cognition items for interpretation using a leave-one-out procedure followed by repetition of Steps 1 and 2. The results showed that the overlap between HEs and cognition variables can be conceptualized as bi-dimensional, with two distinct mechanisms emerging as candidates for separate pathways to the development of HEs: HEs involving perceptual distortions on one hand (including voices), underpinned by a low threshold for signal detection in cognition, and HEs involving sensory overload on the other hand, underpinned by reduced laterality in cognition. We propose that these two dimensions of HEs involving distortions/liberal signal detection, and sensation overload/reduced laterality may map onto psychosis-spectrum and dissociation-spectrum anomalous experiences, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Cognition; Dichotic listening; Hallucinations; Multivariate analysis; Signal detection
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34717270 DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2021.08.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cortex ISSN: 0010-9452 Impact factor: 4.027