Literature DB >> 9468348

Is schizophrenia the price that Homo sapiens pays for language?

T J Crow1.   

Abstract

The dichotomy between schizophrenia and manic-depressive illness is, as E. Kraepelin suspected, flawed; no unequivocal separation can be achieved. There are no categories of psychosis, but only continua of variation. However, the definition of nuclear symptoms by K. Schneider reveals the fundamental characteristics of the core syndrome--it is independent of the environment and constant in incidence across populations that have been separated for thousands of years. The associated genetic variation must be as old as Homo sapiens and represent a component of diversity that crosses the population as a whole. The fecundity disadvantage that accompanies the syndrome requires a balance in a substantial and universal advantage; this advantage, it is proposed, is the speciation characteristic of language; language and psychosis have a common evolutionary origin. Language, it is suggested, originated in a critical change on the sex chromosomes (the 'speciation event'--the genetic change that defined the species) occurring in East Africa between 100 and 250 thousand years ago that allowed the two hemispheres to develop with a degree of independence. Language can be understood as bi-hemispheric with one component function--a linear output sequence--confined to the dominant hemisphere--and a second--parallel distributed sampling occurring mainly in the non-dominant hemisphere. This mechanism provides an account of the generativity of language. The significance of nuclear symptoms is that these reflect a breakdown of bi-hemispheric coordination of language, perhaps specifically of the process of 'indexicalisation' (the distinction between 'I' and 'you') of self- versus other-generated references. Nuclear symptoms can be described as 'language at the end of its tether'; the phenomena and population characteristics of the nuclear syndrome of schizophrenia thus yield clues to the origin of the species.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9468348     DOI: 10.1016/s0920-9964(97)00110-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Schizophr Res        ISSN: 0920-9964            Impact factor:   4.939


  65 in total

1.  White matter volume abnormalities and associations with symptomatology in schizophrenia.

Authors:  Nikolaos Makris; Larry J Seidman; Todd Ahern; David N Kennedy; Verne S Caviness; Ming T Tsuang; Jill M Goldstein
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2010-06-09       Impact factor: 3.222

2.  White matter integrity, language, and childhood onset schizophrenia.

Authors:  Kristi Clark; Katherine L Narr; Joseph O'Neill; Jennifer Levitt; Prabha Siddarth; Owen Phillips; Arthur Toga; Rochelle Caplan
Journal:  Schizophr Res       Date:  2012-03-10       Impact factor: 4.939

Review 3.  In your right mind: right hemisphere contributions to language processing and production.

Authors:  Annukka K Lindell
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rev       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 7.444

Review 4.  The mirror brain, concepts, and language: the price of anthropogenesis.

Authors:  T V Chernigovskaya
Journal:  Neurosci Behav Physiol       Date:  2007-03

5.  Genomic and network patterns of schizophrenia genetic variation in human evolutionary accelerated regions.

Authors:  Ke Xu; Eric E Schadt; Katherine S Pollard; Panos Roussos; Joel T Dudley
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2015-02-12       Impact factor: 16.240

6.  Association between forkhead-box P2 gene polymorphism and clinical symptoms in chronic schizophrenia in a Chinese population.

Authors:  Wenwang Rao; Xiangdong Du; Yingyang Zhang; Qiong Yu; Li Hui; Yaqin Yu; Changgui Kou; Guangzhong Yin; Xiaomin Zhu; Lijuan Man; Jair C Soares; Xiang Yang Zhang
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2017-04-18       Impact factor: 3.575

7.  On identifying the processes underlying schizophrenic speech disorder.

Authors:  Nancy M Docherty
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2011-05-11       Impact factor: 9.306

8.  A longitudinal study of schizophrenia- and affective spectrum disorders in individuals diagnosed with a developmental language disorder as children.

Authors:  Svend Erik Mouridsen; Karen-Marie Hauschild
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2008-09-26       Impact factor: 3.575

9.  Are Bipolar Disorder and Schizophrenia Neuroanatomically Distinct? An Anatomical Likelihood Meta-analysis.

Authors:  Kevin Yu; Charlton Cheung; Meikei Leung; Qi Li; Siew Chua; Gráinne McAlonan
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2010-10-26       Impact factor: 3.169

Review 10.  Are anticorrelated networks in the brain relevant to schizophrenia?

Authors:  Peter Williamson
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2007-05-10       Impact factor: 9.306

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