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Journal ArticleDOI

Telemetered EEG-EOG during psychotic behaviors of schizophrenia.

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TLDR
The abnormal wave forms of schizophrenic patients seldom coincided with episodes of blocking, stereotypy, or other abnormal behaviors, and increased extraocular activity or blinking were recorded in a majority of patients, but were not consistently associated with the abnormal behavior or perceptual events.
Abstract
• In an effort to establish correlations between abnormal behaviors characteristic of schizophrenia and simultaneous cerebral electrical activity, EEGs and electro-oculograms (EOGs) were continuously recorded for 2 to 24 hours by radiotelemetry from 40 patients with schizophrenia and 12 normal control subjects. Trained observers recorded specific behavior patterns permitting visual and computer analysis of EEG during hallucinations, stereotypy, catatonia, psychomotor blocking, and other characteristic manifestations of schizophrenia. Electroencephalographic abnormalities consisting of focal slow or spike activity over either temporal region were found in nearly half of the patients so recorded. In contrast to the EEG during ictal episodes of epilepsy, the abnormal wave forms of schizophrenic patients seldom coincided with episodes of blocking, stereotypy, or other abnormal behaviors. Increased extraocular activity or blinking were recorded in a majority of patients, but were not consistently associated with the abnormal behavior or perceptual events.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Verbal hallucinations and language production processes in schizophrenia

TL;DR: In this article, a model of schizophrenic speech disorganization is presented that postulates a disturbance of discourse planning that specifies communicative intentions, leading to the production of unintended imagery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disturbances of voluntary control of saccadic eye movements in schizophrenic patients

TL;DR: The results indicate that many schizophrenics show difficulties in voluntary control of saccades, suggesting a dysfunction of the frontal cortex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnosis and neuroanatomical correlates of depression in brain-damaged patients. Implications for a neurology of depression.

TL;DR: Based on five case studies, several clinical guidelines for recognizing and diagnosing depression in brain-damaged patients are offered and initial hypotheses about the neuroanatomical basis of the depressive syndrome are generated.
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An anatomy of schizophrenia

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