ABSTRACT
A comparison was made among participants with schizophrenia and those with structural lateralized or diffuse brain damage in order to determine the extent to which the cognitive profile of the schizophrenia sample resembled the profiles obtained from patients with left-hemisphere, right-hemisphere, and diffuse brain damage. The Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological Battery was used as the testing procedure. The data were subjected to discriminant analysis in order to obtain frequencies of predicted classification of the participants with schizophrenia into schizophrenia, left-hemisphere, right-hemisphere, and diffuse groups. Half of the participants with schizophrenia were classified into the schizophrenia group. The other half was evenly distributed across the left-hemisphere, right-hemisphere, and diffuse brain damage groups. There was not a disproportionately large number of participants classified into the left-hemisphere group. Comparisons among these four predicted groups were accomplished for each of the Halstead-Reitan Battery measures using one-way analysis of variance. The comparison of the subtest scores among the predicted groups indicated that the patients classified into the left-hemisphere group were characterized by a pattern of language dysfunction thought to be developmental in nature, and an abnormal lack of asymmetry in tapping speed favoring the right hand.