Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3075159 NeuroImage: Clinical 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Examined dorsal and ventral attention network activity to targets in schizophrenia•Joint ICA (jICA) analyses using ERP and fMRI during target detection was used.•Schizophrenia patients had reduced P300 ERP and fMRI activation to targets.•jICA revealed that P300 was linked to activity in the ventral (salience) network.•This linked component was significantly reduced in schizophrenia patients.

Schizophrenia patients have abnormal neural responses to salient, infrequent events. We integrated event-related potentials (ERP) and fMRI to examine the contributions of the ventral (salience) and dorsal (sustained) attention networks to this dysfunctional neural activation. Twenty-one schizophrenia patients and 22 healthy controls were assessed in separate sessions with ERP and fMRI during a visual oddball task. Visual P100, N100, and P300 ERP waveforms and fMRI activation were assessed. A joint independent components analysis (jICA) on the ERP and fMRI data were conducted. Patients exhibited reduced P300, but not P100 or N100, amplitudes to targets and reduced fMRI neural activation in both dorsal and ventral attentional networks compared with controls. However, the jICA revealed that the P300 was linked specifically to activation in the ventral (salience) network, including anterior cingulate, anterior insula, and temporal parietal junction, with patients exhibiting significantly lower activation. The P100 and N100 were linked to activation in the dorsal (sustained) network, with no group differences in level of activation. This joint analysis approach revealed the nature of target detection deficits that were not discernable by either imaging methodology alone, highlighting the utility of a multimodal fMRI and ERP approach to understand attentional network deficits in schizophrenia.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Biological Psychiatry
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