Author:
MEDALIA A.,REVHEIM N.,CASEY M.
Abstract
Background. Memory deficits are commonly experienced by patients with schizophrenia, often
persist even after effective psychotropic treatment of psychotic symptoms and have been
demonstrated to interfere with many aspects of successful psychiatric rehabilitation. Because of
significant impact on functional outcome, effective remediation of cognitive deficits has been
increasingly cited as an essential component of comprehensive treatment. Efforts to remediate
memory deficits have met with circumscribed success, leaving uncertain whether schizophrenia
patients can be taught, without experimental induction, independently to employ semantic encoding
or a range of other mnemonic techniques.Method. We examined the feasibility of using memory and problem solving teaching techniques
developed within educational psychology – techniques which promote intrinsic motivation and task
engagement through contextualization and personalization of learning activities – to remediate
memory deficits in a group of in-patients with chronic schizophrenia spectrum disorders.Results. Although our memory remediation group significantly improved on the memory
remediation task, they did not make greater gains on measures of immediate paragraph recall or list
learning than the control groups.Conclusions. Targeted remediation of memory appears to yield task specific improvement but the
gains do not generalize to other memory tasks. Subjects receiving memory remediation failed to
independently activate mnemonic encoding strategies learned and used successfully within training
tasks to other general measures of verbal learning and memory.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
75 articles.
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