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Journal ArticleDOI

Early information processing deficit in schizophrenia. New findings using schizophrenic subgroups and manic control subjects.

Dennis P. Saccuzzo, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1981 - 
- Vol. 38, Iss: 2, pp 175-179
TLDR
In this paper, three experiments were conducted using tachistoscopically presented stimuli in order to evaluate these two stages of information processing (iconic storage and speed of processing) in schizophrenic and control subjects and found that, independent of iconic storage and sensory registration, slow information processing is a relatively stable deficit of schizophrenic patients with a poor prognosis.
Abstract
• In recent years, the idea that schizophrenia involves a primary disturbance of the higher cognitive (ie, cortical) thinking processes has been challenged by investigators who have shown that there may be a primary disturbance in schizophrenia in the early stages of information processing that occurs during the first few hundred milliseconds after the stimulus reaches the sense organs. Among the hypothesized early information processing deficits are deficiencies in iconic storage (a brief peripheral memory store) and slowness of processing from iconic storage to a more permanent memory system. Three experiments were conducted using tachistoscopically presented stimuli in order to evaluate these two stages of information processing (iconic storage and speed of processing) in schizophrenic and control subjects. Results converged in supporting the hypothesis that, independent of iconic storage and sensory registration, slow information processing is a relatively stable deficit of schizophrenic patients with a poor prognosis. The schizophrenic patients with a good prognosis had a similar deficit, which was reversible. Results are discussed as they relate to the early information processing deficit theories of schizophrenia.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The neuropsychology of schizophrenia.

TL;DR: A model is proposed for integrating the neural and cognitive aspects of the positive symptoms of acute schizophrenia, using evidence from postmortem neuropathology and neurochemistry, clinical and preclinical studies of dopaminergic neurotransmission, anatomical connections between the limbic system and basal ganglia, attentional and other cognitive abnormalities underlying the positive Symptoms of schizophrenia.
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Information Processing and Attentional Functioning in the Developmental Course of Schizophrenic Disorders

TL;DR: The evidence that certain deficits in information processing and attentional functioning are present across populations at risk for schizophrenic disorder, with active schizophrenic psychotic symptomatology, and in relative remission after a schizophrenic psychosis is examined.
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A Heuristic Vulnerability/Stress Model of Schizophrenic Episodes

TL;DR: A tentative model of schizophrenic psychotic episodes is presented, based on the evidence that certain characteristics of individuals may serve as vulnerability factors and that environmental stressors may precipitate psychotic periods in vulnerable individuals.
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Information Processing and Attention Dysfunctions in Schizophrenia

TL;DR: Information-processing research provides an important viewpoint from which to understand the group of schizophrenias and recent advances and novel applications of these techniques in "boundary" populations such as high-risk children and schizotypal patients are discussed.
References
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