Title of article :
Levels-of-processing effect on word recognition in schizophrenia
Author/Authors :
J. Daniel Ragland، نويسنده , , Stephen T. Moelter، نويسنده , , Claire McGrath، نويسنده , , S. Kristian Hill، نويسنده , , Raquel E. Gur، نويسنده , , Warren B. Bilker، نويسنده , , Steven J. Siegel، نويسنده , , Ruben C. Gur، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Background
Individuals with schizophrenia have difficulty organizing words semantically to facilitate encoding. This is commonly attributed to organizational rather than semantic processing limitations. By requiring participants to classify and encode words on either a shallow (e.g., uppercase/lowercase) or deep level (e.g., concrete/abstract), the levels-of-processing paradigm eliminates the need to generate organizational strategies.
Methods
This paradigm was administered to 30 patients with schizophrenia and 30 healthy comparison subjects to test whether providing a strategy would improve patient performance.
Results
Word classification during shallow and deep encoding was slower and less accurate in patients. Patients also responded slowly during recognition testing and maintained a more conservative response bias following deep encoding; however, both groups showed a robust levels-of-processing effect on recognition accuracy, with unimpaired patient performance following both shallow and deep encoding.
Conclusions
This normal levels-of-processing effect in the patient sample suggests that semantic processing is sufficiently intact for patients to benefit from organizational cues. Memory remediation efforts may therefore be most successful if they focus on teaching patients to form organizational strategies during initial encoding.
Keywords :
Schizophrenia , levels-of-processing , Semantic processing , Episodicmemory , encoding strategy , neuropsychology
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry