scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Verbal self-monitoring and auditory verbal hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia.

TLDR
The results suggest an association between delusions and impaired judgements about ambiguous sensory stimuli and the specific tendency of hallucinators to misattribute their distorted voice to someone else may reflect impaired awareness of internally generated verbal material.
Abstract
Background. Contemporary cognitive models of auditory verbal hallucinations propose that they arise through defective self-monitoring. We used a paradigm that engages verbal self-monitoring to investigate this theory in patients with schizophrenia. Methods. Ten patients with auditory verbal hallucinations and delusions (hallucinators), eight patients with delusions but no hallucinations (non-hallucinators), and 20 non-psychiatric control subjects were tested. Participants read single adjectives aloud, under the following randomized conditions: reading aloud; reading aloud with acoustic distortion of their own voice; reading aloud with alien feedback (someone else’s voice); and reading aloud with distorted alien feedback. Immediately after articulating each word, participants identified the source of the speech they heard (‘self’}‘other’}‘unsure’), via a button press. Response choice and reaction time were recorded. Results. When reading aloud with distorted feedback of their own voice, patients in both groups made more errors than controls; they either misidentified its source or were unsure. Hallucinators were particularly prone to misattributing their distorted voice to someone else, and were more likely to make errors when the words presented were derogatory. Both patient groups made faster decisions than controls about the source of distorted or alien speech, but faster responses were only associated with errors in the former condition. Conclusions. Impaired verbal self-monitoring was evident in both hallucinators and nonhallucinators. As both groups had delusions, the results suggest an association between delusions and impaired judgements about ambiguous sensory stimuli. The specific tendency of hallucinators to misattribute their distorted voice to someone else may reflect impaired awareness of internally generated verbal material.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural substrates of vocalization feedback monitoring in primate auditory cortex

TL;DR: It is shown that neurons in the auditory cortex of marmoset monkeys are sensitive to auditory feedback during vocal production, and that changes in the feedback alter the coding properties of these neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of the Insula in Schizophrenia

TL;DR: The normal function of the insula is described and pathology of this region in schizophrenia is examined, suggesting that insula dysfunction may contribute to hallucinations, a cardinal feature of schizophrenia.
Book ChapterDOI

The neuropsychology of schizophrenia

TL;DR: This chapter presents the neuropsychological aspects of schizophrenia, with an emphasis upon the major cognitive and behavioural functions that are affected, and focuses on neurocognitive processes involved in the expression of the disease and elaborate on possibly relevant modulatory factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are psychotic psychopathology and neurocognition orthogonal? A systematic review of their associations.

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review of associations between psychopathological dimensions of psychosis and measures of neurocognitive impairment in subjects with a lifetime history of nonaffective psychosis was presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Corollary discharge dysfunction in schizophrenia: can it explain auditory hallucinations?

TL;DR: The results of a series of studies are shown that: (1) event-related brain potentials (ERPs) can be used to demonstrate the corollary discharge phenomenon during talking, (2) corollsary discharge is abnormal in patients with schizophrenia, (3) EEG gamma band coherence between frontal and temporal lobes is greater during talking than listening and is disrupted by distorted feedback during talking in normals, and Patients with schizophrenia do not show this pattern for EEG gamma coherence.
References
More filters
Book

Statistical Methods for Psychology

TL;DR: The Statistical Methods for Psychology as discussed by the authors survey statistical techniques commonly used in the behavioral and social sciences, especially psychology and education, and is suitable for either a one-term or a full-year course, and has been used successfully for both.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring and self-repair in speech

TL;DR: It was finally shown that the editing term plus the first word of the repair proper almost always contain sufficient information for the listener to decide how the repair should be related to the original utterance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The auditory hallucination: a phenomenological survey.

TL;DR: A pattern emerged of increasing complexity of the auditory-verbal hallucination over time by a process of accretion, with the addition of more voices and extended dialogues, and more intimacy between subject and voice, which seemed to relate to the lessening of distress and improved coping.
Related Papers (5)