Author:
ROSSELL S. L.,SHAPLESKE J.,DAVID A. S.
Abstract
Background. A sentence verification task was developed
to investigate
semantic memory in schizophrenia.Methods. The test consisted of three types of sentence
(true, unlikely and nonsense) and seven
different types of content (neutral, persecutory, grandiose,
political, religious, relationships and
somatic) representing common delusional themes present in schizophrenic
patients. Sixty-three
schizophrenic patients and 66 matched control subjects were asked to make
true/false judgements to 143 sentences.Results. Overall accuracy was similar across the two groups;
sentences with some emotional themes
and sentences of the unlikely type produced the most violations.
Significant differences between the
two subject groups were found specifically on nonsense sentences with persecutory
and religious
themes. Patients made significantly more incorrect responses (acceptance)
to nonsense sentences
that had an emotional content congruent with their delusional
beliefs, past or present, and also on
unlikely sentences (incorrect rejections) whose content was not congruent
with their delusions.
Further analysis of response bias in the patients showed, overall,
that there were more incorrect
rejections (a reflection of the large number of unlikely sentence
errors) and more incorrect responses
to sentences congruent with patients delusions. Furthermore,
analysis of those patients currently
experiencing delusions revealed more incorrect responses to sentences congruent
with their
delusional ideas compared with patients not currently deluded.Conclusions. These findings are indicative of cognitive
bias in schizophrenia towards certain
emotional themes that may underlie illogical semantic connections and delusions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
36 articles.
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