The structure of meaning in schizophrenia: A study of spontaneous speech in Chinese

被引:0
作者
Zhang, Han [1 ]
He, Rui [2 ]
Palominos, Claudio [2 ]
Hsu, Ning [3 ]
Cheung, Hintat [4 ]
Hinzen, Wolfram [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Guangzhou Univ, Sch Foreign Studies, Guangzhou, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Translat & Language Sci, Barcelona, Spain
[3] IQVIA, Durham, NC USA
[4] Asia Univ, Dept Audiol & Speech Language Pathol, Taichung, Taiwan
[5] Catalan Inst Adv Studies & Res ICREA, Barcelona, Spain
关键词
Schizophrenia; Mandarin Chinese; Spontaneous speech; Narrative coherence; Referential function; Semantic structure; Graph theory; Semantic similarity; PSYCHOSIS; LANGUAGE; FEATURES;
D O I
10.1016/j.psychres.2024.116347
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Narrative speech production requires the retrieval of concepts to refer to entities, which need to be referenceable more than once for any form of narrative coherence to arise. Such coherence has long been observed to be affected in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD), yet the underlying mechanisms have been a longstanding puzzle, with existing evidence predominantly derived from Indo-European languages. Here we analyzed two picture descriptions from 22 native Mandarin Chinese speakers with SSD and 15 healthy controls. An analysis scheme was created targeting key mechanisms in the genesis of referential meaning in speech. Results revealed that individuals with SSD used more definite-anaphoric noun phrases (NPs), which refer back to a previously mentioned entity in a narrative, and fewer NPs with adjectival modifiers. Definite NPs appeared earlier in their speech, and both definite and indefinite NPs occurred at shorter temporal distances. Participants with SSD referenced fewer entities, which in turn were more recurrent (referenced more than once). Furthermore, speech graphs capturing how entities are referenced across a narrative exhibited higher clustering, centrality, density, and shorter characteristic path lengths in SSD. Overall, these results from a non-Indo-European language support the new concept of a 'shrinking' or more condensed semantic space in SSD, impeding normal mental navigation across the concepts we retrieve during speech.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 34 条
[1]   Are language features associated with psychosis risk universal? A study in Mandarin-speaking youths at clinical high risk for psychosis [J].
Agurto, Carla ;
Norel, Raquel ;
Wen, Bo ;
Wei, Yanyan ;
Zhang, Dan ;
Bilgrami, Zarina ;
Hsi, Xiaolu ;
Zhang, Tianhong ;
Pasternak, Ofer ;
Li, Huijun ;
Keshavan, Matcheri ;
Seidman, Larry J. ;
Whitfield-Gabrieli, Susan ;
Shenton, Martha E. ;
Niznikiewicz, Margaret A. ;
Wang, Jijun ;
Cecchi, Guillermo ;
Corcoran, Cheryl ;
Stone, William S. .
WORLD PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 22 (01) :157-158
[2]   Progressive changes in descriptive discourse in First Episode Schizophrenia: a longitudinal computational semantics study [J].
Alonso-Sanchez, Maria Francisca ;
Ford, Sabrina D. ;
MacKinley, Michael ;
Silva, Angelica ;
Limongi, Roberto ;
Palaniyappan, Lena .
SCHIZOPHRENIA, 2022, 8 (01)
[3]   Automated linguistic analysis in speech samples of Turkish-speaking patients with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders [J].
Arslan, Berat ;
Kizilay, Elif ;
Verim, Burcu ;
Demirlek, Cemal ;
Dokuyan, Yagmur ;
Turan, Yaren Ecesu ;
Kucukakdag, Aybuke ;
Demir, Muhammed ;
Cesim, Ezgi ;
Bora, Emre .
SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2024, 267 :65-71
[4]  
Bell C.C., 1994, J Am Med Assoc, V272, P828, DOI [10.1001/jama.1994.03520100096046, DOI 10.1001/JAMA.1994.03520100096046]
[5]   Construct validity for computational linguistic metrics in individuals at clinical risk for psychosis: Associations with clinical ratings [J].
Bilgrami, Zarina R. ;
Sarac, Cansu ;
Srivastava, Agrima ;
Herrera, Shaynna N. ;
Azis, Matilda ;
Haas, Shalaila S. ;
Shaik, Riaz B. ;
Parvaz, Muhammad A. ;
Mittal, Vijay A. ;
Cecchi, Guillermo ;
Corcoran, Cheryl M. .
SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2022, 245 :90-96
[6]   Natural language processing for defining linguistic features in schizophrenia: A sample from Turkish speakers [J].
Cabuk, Tugce ;
Sevim, Nurullah ;
Mutlu, Emre ;
Yagcioglu, A. Elif Anil ;
Koc, Aykut ;
Toulopoulou, Timothea .
SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2024, 266 :183-189
[7]   A finer-grained linguistic profile of Alzheimer's disease and Mild Cognitive Impairment [J].
Chapin, Kayla ;
Clarke, Natasha ;
Garrard, Peter ;
Hinzen, Wolfram .
JOURNAL OF NEUROLINGUISTICS, 2022, 63
[8]   Identifiability and definiteness in Chinese [J].
Chen, P .
LINGUISTICS, 2004, 42 (06) :1129-1184
[9]   Referential noun phrases distribute differently in Turkish speakers with schizophrenia [J].
Cokal, D. ;
Palominos-Flores, C. ;
Yalincetin, B. ;
Ture-Abaci, O. ;
Bora, E. ;
Hinzen, W. .
SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2023, 259 :104-110
[10]   The language profile of formal thought disorder [J].
Cokal, Derya ;
Sevilla, Gabriel ;
Jones, William Stephen ;
Zimmerer, Vitor ;
Deamer, Felicity ;
Douglas, Maggie ;
Spencer, Helen ;
Turkington, Douglas ;
Ferrier, Nicol ;
Varley, Rosemary ;
Watson, Stuart ;
Hinzen, Wolfram .
NPJ SCHIZOPHRENIA, 2018, 4