Prospection deficits in patients with first-episode schizophrenia: a cross-sectional comparative study

Author:

Fung Antoinette C. O.,Zhang Rui-tingORCID,Yip Stanley S. L.,Poon Grace K. S.,Cheng Chi-Wai,Yang Tian-xiao,Lui Simon S. Y.ORCID,Chan Raymond C. K.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractProspection refers to the ability to simulate and pre-experience future events. Schizophrenia patients have difficulty in anticipating pleasure in future events, but previous studies examined prospection deficits in chronic schizophrenia patients. This study aimed to investigate prospection deficits in first-episode schizophrenia patients. Thirty first-episode schizophrenia patients and 31 healthy controls completed the Affective Prospection Task, which utilized pictorial cues to involve positive, neutral and negative prospection. Participants’ ratings regarding the phenomenal characteristics of their prospected events were collected, and their prospected narratives were coded using a valid scoring manual. We also assessed intelligence, working memory and logical memory. The results showed, in all participants, valence of the cues significantly influenced participants’ sense of pre-experience, temporal distance, emotion experience, vividness and participation of the prospected events, as well as the richness of sensory details. The two groups did not differ in self-report phenomenal characteristics of their prospected events. For coded characteristics, schizophrenia patients’ prospected narratives were less rich in thought/emotion than controls, even after controlling for intelligence and memory deficits. We extended empirical evidence for prospection deficits from chronic schizophrenia samples to first-episode schizophrenia patients.

Funder

HKU Seed Fund for Basic Research for New Staff

Scientific Foundation of Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (E2CX3415CX), Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, and Philip K. H. Wong Foundation.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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