• Title of article

    Sensory Contributions to Impaired Prosodic Processing in Schizophrenia

  • Author/Authors

    David I. Leitman، نويسنده , , John J. Foxe، نويسنده , , Pamela D. Butler، نويسنده , , Alice Saperstein، نويسنده , , Nadine Revheim، نويسنده , , Daniel C. Javitt، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    56
  • To page
    61
  • Abstract
    Background Deficits in affect recognition are prominent features of schizophrenia. Within the auditory domain, patients show difficulty in interpreting vocal emotional cues based on intonation (prosody). The relationship of these symptoms to deficits in basic sensory processing has not been previously evaluated. Methods Forty-three patients and 34 healthy comparison subjects were tested on two affective prosody measures: voice emotion identification and voice emotion discrimination. Basic auditory sensory processing was measured using a tone-matching paradigm and the Distorted Tunes Test (DTT). A subset of subjects was also tested on facial affect identification and discrimination tasks. Results Patients showed significantly impaired performance on all emotion processing tasks. Within the patient group, a principal components analysis demonstrated significant intercorrelations between basic pitch perception and affective prosodic performance. In contrast, facial affect recognition deficits represented a distinct second component. Prosodic affect measures correlated significantly with severity of negative symptoms and impaired global outcome. Conclusions These results demonstrate significant relationships between basic auditory processing deficits and impaired receptive prosody in schizophrenia. The separate loading of auditory and visual affective recognition measures suggests that within-modality factors may be more significant than cross-modality factors in the etiology of affect recognition deficits in schizophrenia.
  • Keywords
    Schizophrenia , Auditory , visual , Prosody , Facerecognition , Emotion
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Serial Year
    2005
  • Journal title
    Biological Psychiatry
  • Record number

    502735