Author:
Berkovitch L,Del Cul A,Maheu M,Dehaene S
Abstract
AbstractPrevious research suggests that the conscious perception of a masked stimulus is impaired in schizophrenia, while unconscious bottom-up processing of the same stimulus, as assessed by subliminal priming, can be preserved. Here, we test this postulated dissociation between intact bottom-up and impaired top-down processing and evaluate its brain mechanisms using high-density recordings of event-related potentials. Sixteen patients with schizophrenia and sixteen controls were exposed to peripheral digits with various degrees of visibility, under conditions of either focused attention or distraction by another task. In the distraction condition, the brain activity evoked by masked digits was drastically reduced in both groups, but early bottom-up visual activation could still be detected and did not differ between patients and controls. By contrast, under focused top-down attention, a major impairment was observed: in patients, contrary to controls, the late non-linear ignition associated with the P3 component was reduced. Interestingly, the patients showed an essentially normal attentional amplification of the PI and N2 components. These results suggest that some but not all top-down attentional amplification processes are impaired in schizophrenia, while bottom-up processing seems to be preserved.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference124 articles.
1. Baars, B.J. , 1993. A Cognitive Theory of Consciousness, Reprint edition, ed. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge England; New York.
2. Visuo-spatial consciousness and parieto-occipital areas: a high-resolution EEG study;Cereb. Cortex N. Y. N 1991,2006
3. Electromagnetic brain mapping
4. Hierarchical Organization of Human Cortical Networks in Health and Schizophrenia
5. Auditory Verbal Hallucinations and Brain Dysconnectivity in the Perisylvian Language Network: A Multimodal Investigation