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1.
Psychiatry Res ; 149(1-3): 105-19, 2007 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17125845

ABSTRACT

Contextual effects were explored in schizophrenia patients and paired comparison subjects during a long-term face recognition task. The objective was to investigate the contextual effects on face recognition by manipulating, in the same experiment, the perceptual context of the face (intrinsic vs. extrinsic) and the task context (inclusion vs. exclusion instructions). The situation was derived from the Jacoby's [Jacoby, L.L., 1991. A process dissociation framework: separating automatic from intentional uses of memory. Journal of Memory and Language 30, 513-541] process dissociation procedure. The results showed that schizophrenia patients (N=20) presented lower performances than healthy controls (N=20) in the inclusion but not in the exclusion task. This observation emphasizes the heterogeneity of recollection and suggests that the memory impairment in schizophrenia reflects an imbalance between two mechanisms. The first is a deficit in "associative recollection", i.e., the failure to use efficiently associative information. The other is an enhanced "discriminative recollection" that impedes their capacity to process information separately from its perceptual context. In addition, correlation with symptoms suggest that the former is expressed in the loosening of associations characteristic of disorganization symptoms, whereas the latter reflects the lack of flexibility or the contextualization bias related to psychotic symptoms, i.e., delusions and hallucinations.


Subject(s)
Association , Discrimination, Psychological , Facial Expression , Mental Recall , Perceptual Disorders/diagnosis , Perceptual Disorders/epidemiology , Reaction Time , Recognition, Psychology , Schizophrenia/epidemiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Severity of Illness Index , Visual Perception
2.
Psychiatry Res ; 134(1): 43-53, 2005 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15808289

ABSTRACT

Previous studies showed that schizophrenic patients have a deficit in facial information processing. The purpose of the present study was to test the abilities of patients with schizophrenia and normal controls in emotion and identity matching when these two dimensions were varied orthogonally. Subjects (20 schizophrenic patients and 20 controls) had to report if two faces had the same emotion or belonged to the same person. When the task concerned one type of information (i.e. emotion or identity), the other one was either constant (same person or same emotion) or changed (different person or different emotion). Schizophrenic patients performed worse than controls for both kinds of facial information. Their deficit was more important when the secondary factor was changed. In particular, they performed at chance level when they had to match one emotion expressed by two distinct persons. Finally, correlation analysis indicated that performance/deficit in identity and emotion matching co-varied and that in such tasks performance is negatively correlated with the severity of negative symptoms in patients. Schizophrenic patients present a generalised deficit for accessing facial information. A facial emotion and an identity-processing deficit are related to negative symptoms. Implications for face-recognition models are discussed.


Subject(s)
Attention , Discrimination Learning , Emotions , Facial Expression , Memory, Short-Term , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Schizophrenia/diagnosis , Schizophrenic Psychology , Adult , Association Learning , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Reference Values , Statistics as Topic
3.
Neuroreport ; 14(7): 1081-5, 2003 May 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12802207

ABSTRACT

An abnormal sense of agency is among the most characteristic yet perplexing positive symptoms of schizophrenia. Schizophrenics may either attribute the consequences of their own actions to the intentions of others (delusions of influence), or may perceive themselves as causing events which they do not in fact control (megalomania). Previous reports have often described inaccurate agency judgements in schizophrenia, but have not identified the disordered neural mechanisms or psychological processes underlying these judgements. We report the perceived time of a voluntary action and its consequence in eight schizophrenic patients and matched controls. The patients showed an unusually strong binding effect between actions and consequences. Specifically, the temporal interval between action and consequence appeared shorter for patients than for controls. Patients may overassociate their actions with subsequent events, experiencing their actions as having unusual causal efficacy. Disorders of agency may reflect an underlying abnormality in the experience of voluntary action.


Subject(s)
Awareness/physiology , Perception/physiology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Schizophrenia/physiopathology , Acoustic Stimulation/methods , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
4.
Neuropsychologia ; 40(5): 503-11, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11749980

ABSTRACT

The selective attention to facial emotion and identity was investigated in 12 patients with schizophrenia and 12 healthy participants. Both patients and controls were required to perform two classification tasks (according either to identity or emotion). Two separate values for identity (person A/person B) and for emotion (fear/anger) were used. When the classification task was on one dimension, the other dimension was either correlated, constant, or orthogonal (Garner WR. The Processing of Information and Structure. Potomac, MD: Erlbaum, 1974, Garner WR. Interaction of stimulus dimensions in concept and choice processes. Cognitive Psychology 1976;8:98-123). Results indicated that both patients and healthy participants had an asymmetrical pattern of performance: they were able to selectively attend to the identity of the face presented, regardless of the emotion expressed on the face, but variation in identity interfered with the classification of facial emotion. Moreover, a correlational study indicated that the identity interference on emotion classification for schizophrenic patients covaried with the severity of their negative symptoms. The selective attention competencies in schizophrenia and the independence hypothesis of emotion and face recognition are discussed in the framework of current face recognition models.


Subject(s)
Attention , Emotions , Facial Expression , Recognition, Psychology , Schizophrenia , Schizophrenic Psychology , Adult , Case-Control Studies , Chronic Disease , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Psychological , Severity of Illness Index
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