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Reaction time paradigms in subjects at risk for schizophrenia.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Mainz, Germany.
Deviant response patterns in experimental reaction time paradigms in schizophrenic probands are well documented. Although simple reaction times are strongly influenced by the current psychopathological status of the proband (e.g. florid psychotic patients versus remitted patients) these influences are less clear for measures obtained from more complex reaction time paradigms. These include the crossover paradigm (reaction time to stimuli presented after constant preparatory intervals in comparison to reaction time to stimuli presented after irregular preparatory intervals) and the modality shift paradigm (reaction time to a stimulus (light or tone) when the modality of the stimulus on the preceding trial was the same compared to when it was different). It is not clear if these peculiarities of response patterns occur as a consequence of the disease or if they represent vulnerability markers for schizophrenia. Both crossover reaction time and modality shift reaction time paradigms were applied to 56 drug free schizophrenics, 45 healthy siblings of these patients and 68 healthy controls. The results indicate that retarded reaction times and the occurrence of the crossover effect as well as of the modality shift effect distinguish schizophrenics and controls. Healthy siblings of schizophrenics differed from healthy controls with regard to the crossover effect but not with regard to the modality shift effect. Therefore only the crossover effect represents a vulnerability marker for schizophrenia. Correlations between the modality shift and the crossover effect revealed strong correlations in the schizophrenic group only.
PMID: 7947414 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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Cited by 2 PubMed Central articles
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Response variability in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: a neuronal and glial energetics hypothesis.
Russell VA, Oades RD, Tannock R, Killeen PR, Auerbach JG, Johansen EB, Sagvolden T.
Behav Brain Funct. 2006 Aug 23; 2:30. Epub 2006 Aug 23.
[Behav Brain Funct. 2006]
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Neuropsychological functioning in adolescents and young adults at genetic risk for schizophrenia and affective psychoses: results from the Harvard and Hillside Adolescent High Risk Studies.
Seidman LJ, Giuliano AJ, Smith CW, Stone WS, Glatt SJ, Meyer E, Faraone SV, Tsuang MT, Cornblatt B.
Schizophr Bull. 2006 Jul; 32(3):507-24. Epub 2006 May 17.
[Schizophr Bull. 2006]