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Lengthened temporal integration in schizophrenia
- Source :
- Neuropsychologia. 51(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2012
-
Abstract
- Research in schizophrenia has tended to emphasize deficits in higher cognitive abilities, such as attention, memory, and executive function. Here we provide evidence for dysfunction at a more fundamental level of perceptual processing, temporal integration. On a measure of flicker fusion, patients with schizophrenia exhibited significantly lower thresholds than age and education matched healthy controls. We reasoned that this finding could result from a longer window of temporal integration or could reflect diminished repetition suppression: if every frame of the repeating stimulus were represented as novel, its perceived duration would be accordingly longer. To tease apart these non-exclusive hypotheses, we asked patients to report the number of stimuli perceived on the screen at once (numerosity) as they watched rapidly flashing stimuli that were either repeated or novel. Patients reported significantly higher numerosity than controls in all conditions, again indicating a longer window of temporal integration in schizophrenia. Further, patients showed the largest difference from controls in the repeated condition, suggesting a possible effect of weaker repetition suppression. Finally, we establish that our findings generalize to several different classes of stimuli (letters, pictures, faces, words, and pseudo-words), demonstrating a non-specific effect of a lengthened window of integration. We conclude that the visual system in schizophrenics integrates input over longer periods of time, and that repetition suppression may also be deficient. We suggest that these abnormalities in the processing of temporal information may underlie higher-level deficits in schizophrenia and account for the disturbed sense of continuity and fragmentation of events in time reported by patients.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Cognitive Neuroscience
media_common.quotation_subject
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Flicker fusion threshold
Audiology
Stimulus (physiology)
Vocabulary
Developmental psychology
Flicker Fusion
Perceptual Disorders
Behavioral Neuroscience
Perception
medicine
Psychophysics
Reaction Time
Humans
Temporal information
media_common
Numerosity adaptation effect
Cognition
Time perception
Middle Aged
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Case-Control Studies
Schizophrenia
Female
Psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18733514
- Volume :
- 51
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Neuropsychologia
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a983e3dd38d817b5a46dbee79b7aa1ff