Author:
O'CARROLL R. E.,RUSSELL H. H.,LAWRIE S. M.,JOHNSTONE E. C.
Abstract
Background. In recent years, evidence has accumulated
that a significant proportion of schizophrenic
patients have severe memory impairment, which cannot be attributed to the
effects of medication,
chronicity or institutionalization. Our group has demonstrated that memory
impairment is
associated with poor psychosocial outcome and treatment resistance. Work
on the classical amnesic
syndrome has suggested that memory training is facilitated by adopting
an ‘errorless learning’
approach, where subjects do not experience failure during learning. This
is based on the theory that
the preserved implicit memory of amnesic patients results in implicitly
remembered incorrect
responses interfering with target items, in the absence of a functioning
explicit memory system to
allow differentiation.Method. We compared three groups of subjects, memory-impaired
schizophrenic patients, memory
unimpaired schizophrenic patients and healthy controls.Results. An errorless learning approach conferred a significant
advantage on the memory-impaired
schizophrenic group, bringing their performance up to the level of both
control groups. In contrast,
adopting a traditional trial and error, or errorful approach resulted in
markedly impaired
performance in the memory-impaired schizophrenic group only.Conclusions. We conclude that errorless learning approaches
may be worthy of further evaluation
in the cognitive rehabilitation of memory-impaired schizophrenic patients.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
82 articles.
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