• Title of article

    Slow EEG potentials (contingent negative variation and post-imperative negative variation) in schizophrenia: their association to the present state and to Parkinsonian medication effects

  • Author/Authors

    Rolf Verleger، نويسنده , , Edmund Wascher، نويسنده , , Volker Arolt، نويسنده , , Carola Daase، نويسنده , , Angelika Strohm، نويسنده , , Detlef K?mpf، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    1175
  • To page
    1192
  • Abstract
    Between warning signal (S1) and imperative signal (S2), the EEG shifts negatively (contingent negative variation, CNV) reflecting preparation and expectancy. Reduced CNV and continued negativity after S2 (post-imperative negative variation, PINV) have been repeatedly found in schizophrenic patients and have been interpreted as a deficit in attentional processes (CNV) and as uncertainty about the correctness of oneʹs own response to the S2 (PINV). Recent studies obtained a CNV reduction specifically at central sites but not at frontal ones. The present study investigated whether these alterations of slow negative potentials depend on present state of symptoms, on the particular task used, and on neuroleptic medication. Therefore, out-patients and in-patients were studied, two different S1–S2 tasks were used, and the control groups were healthy subjects and patients with Parkinsonʹs disease. The central CNV reduction was stable across tasks and across in-patients and outpatients. Frontal CNV was reduced in in-patients but in only one of the two tasks in outpatients. The schizophrenic patients’ enhanced PINV was larger contralaterally than ipsilaterally to the responding hand, correlated with medication, and occurred in similar way in patients with Parkinsonʹs disease. Thus, the PINV increase might reflect the Parkinsonian side effects of the anti-psychotic medication. In contrast, the central CNV reduction appears as a stable marker of schizophrenia, the frontal CNV reduction as a state-dependent effect. The central CNV reduction might reflect impairment in forming stable stimulus-response associations, the relative frontal enhancement might reflect the out-patients’ attempt at compensating that impairment.
  • Keywords
    Schizophrenia , Contingent Negative Variation , Parkinsonיs disease , Post-imperative negative variation , event-related potentials
  • Journal title
    Clinical Neurophysiology
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Clinical Neurophysiology
  • Record number

    521678