Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6827026 | Schizophrenia Research | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Semantic categorization abnormalities have been observed in schizophrenia, but studies have rarely focused on the longitudinal trajectory. In this study, we consider semantic performance and the relationship with symptomatic changes during recovery from a first-episode of schizophrenia over a period of 3Â years. Thirty-seven first-episode patients with schizophrenia were compared to thirty-seven matched controls in a categorization task. Patients were assessed at first episode, after clinical stabilization, and annually for the subsequent 3Â years. In the task, participants indicated whether a word belonged to a given category. Each category contained words of varying degrees of semantic relatedness: typical, atypical, borderline, related-but-outside, and unrelated. Reaction times and proportion of 'yes' responses were analyzed. At first assessment, semantic categorization abnormalities were observed in first-episode patients. Patients assigned more semantically-dissimilar words to the categories than controls. As patients stabilized from acute states, their semantic categorization performance improved and then remained stable throughout the entire follow up period of 3Â years. Interestingly, semantic performance deficits, particularly a diminished typicality effect, correlated with negative symptoms in the initial episode, but not at stabilization when symptoms subsided. No significant associations between positive and negative symptoms, or pre-defined categorization measures were identified. The data demonstrated semantic memory abnormalities in first-episode schizophrenia. However, an improvement of semantic categorization performance was observed in stabilized schizophrenia patients. Overall, the data are suggestive of a state effect in semantic abnormalities rather than a trait effect. The correlation between degree of impairment and symptoms may explain previous inconsistent findings.
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Authors
Christy Lai-Ming Hui, Julia Longenecker, Gloria Hoi-Yan Wong, Jennifer Yee-Man Tang, Wing-Chung Chang, Sherry Kit-Wah Chan, Edwin Ho-Ming Lee, Eva Lai-Wah Dunn, May Yin-King Miao, Wai-Song Yeung, Chi-Keung Wong, Wah-Fat Chan, Wai-Nang Tang,