| Literature DB >> 35290874 |
Victoria Sharpe1, Lotte Schoot2, Kathryn Eve Lewandowski3, Dost Öngür3, Halide Bilge Türközer4, Tuna Hasoğlu5, Gina R Kuperberg6.
Abstract
In people with schizophrenia and related disorders, impairments in communication and social functioning can negatively impact social interactions and quality of life. In the present study, we investigated the cognitive basis of a specific aspect of linguistic communication-lexical alignment-in people with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. We probed lexical alignment as participants played a collaborative picture-naming game with the experimenter, in which the two players alternated between naming a dual-name picture (e.g., rabbit/bunny) and listening to their partner name a picture. We found evidence of lexical alignment in all three groups, with no differences between the patient groups and the controls. We argue that these typical patterns of lexical alignment in patients were supported by preserved-and in some cases increased-bottom-up mechanisms, which balanced out impairments in top-down perspective-taking.Entities:
Keywords: Language production; Lexical priming; Linguistic alignment; Mentalizing; Psychosis; Social cognition
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35290874 PMCID: PMC9188992 DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2022.02.032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Schizophr Res ISSN: 0920-9964 Impact factor: 4.662