The spatial range of contour integration deficits in schizophrenia

被引:0
作者
Brian P. Keane
Steven M. Silverstein
Deanna M. Barch
Cameron S. Carter
James M. Gold
Ilona Kovács
Angus W. MacDonald
J. Daniel Ragland
Milton E. Strauss
机构
[1] University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey,Division of Schizophrenia Research, University Behavioral HealthCare
[2] UMDNJ—Robert Wood Johnson Medical School,Department of Psychiatry
[3] Rutgers University,Center for Cognitive Science
[4] New Brunswick,Departments of Psychology, Psychiatry, and Radiology
[5] Washington University in St. Louis,Maryland Psychiatric Research Center
[6] University of California,Department of Cognitive Science
[7] Davis,Department of Psychology
[8] University of Maryland School of Medicine,Department of Psychological Sciences
[9] Budapest University of Technology and Economics,undefined
[10] University of Minnesota,undefined
[11] Case Western Reserve University,undefined
来源
Experimental Brain Research | 2012年 / 220卷
关键词
Schizophrenia; Contour integration; Visual integration; Spatial range; Perceptual organization; Grouping;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Contour integration (CI) refers to the process that represents spatially separated elements as a unified edge or closed shape. Schizophrenia is a psychiatric disorder characterized by symptoms such as hallucinations, delusions, disorganized thinking, inappropriate affect, and social withdrawal. Persons with schizophrenia are impaired at CI, but the specific mechanisms underlying the deficit are still not clear. Here, we explored the hypothesis that poor patient performance owes to reduced feedback or impaired longer-range lateral connectivity within early visual cortex—functionally similar to that found in 5- to 6-year old children. This hypothesis predicts that as target element spacing increases from .7 to 1.4° of visual angle, patient impairments will become more pronounced. As a test of the prediction, 25 healthy controls and 36 clinically stable, asymptomatic persons with schizophrenia completed a CI task that involved determining whether a subset of Gabor elements formed a leftward or rightward pointing shape. Adjacent shape elements were spaced at either .7 or 1.4° of visual angle. Difficulty in each spacing condition depended on the number of noise elements present. Patients performed worse than controls overall, both groups performed worse with the larger spacing, and the magnitude of the between-group difference was not amplified at the larger spacing. These results show that CI deficits in schizophrenia cannot be explained in terms of a reduced spatial range of integration, at least not when the shape elements are spaced within 1.5°. Later-developing, low-level integrative mechanisms of lateral connectivity and feedback appear not to be differentially impaired in the illness.
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页码:251 / 259
页数:8
相关论文
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