Neural oscillatory deficits in schizophrenia predict behavioral and neurocognitive impairments
Author
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Martínez, Antígona
Author
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Gaspar Ramos, Pablo
Author
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Hillyard, Steven A.
Author
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Bickel, Stephan
Author
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Lakatos, Peter
Author
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Días, Elisa C.
Author
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Javitt, Daniel C.
Admission date
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2015-10-16T19:28:04Z
Available date
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2015-10-16T19:28:04Z
Publication date
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2015
Cita de ítem
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Frontiers in Human Neuroscience July 2015 | Volume9 | Article 371
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00371
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/134441
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Paying attention to visual stimuli is typically accompanied by event-related desynchronizations (ERD) of ongoing alpha (7-14 Hz) activity in visual cortex. The present study used time-frequency based analyses to investigate the role of impaired alpha ERD in visual processing deficits in schizophrenia (Sz). Subjects viewed sinusoidal gratings of high (HSF) and low (LSF) spatial frequency (SF) designed to test functioning of the parvo- vs. magnocellular pathways, respectively. Patients with Sz and healthy controls paid attention selectively to either the LSF or HSF gratings which were presented in random order. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded to all stimuli. As in our previous study, it was found that Sz patients were selectively impaired at detecting LSF target stimuli and that ERP amplitudes to LSF stimuli were diminished, both for the early sensory-evoked components and for the attend minus unattend difference component (the Selection Negativity), which is generally regarded as a specific index of feature-selective attention. In the time-frequency domain, the differential ERP deficits to LSF stimuli were echoed in a virtually absent theta-band phase locked response to both unattended and attended LSF stimuli (along with relatively intact theta-band activity for HSF stimuli). In contrast to the theta-band evoked responses which were tightly stimulus locked, stimulus-induced desynchronizations of ongoing alpha activity were not tightly stimulus locked and were apparent only in induced power analyses. Sz patients were significantly impaired in the attention-related modulation of ongoing alpha activity for both HSF and LSF stimuli. These deficits correlated with patients' behavioral deficits in visual information processing as well as with visually based neurocognitive deficits. These findings suggest an additional, pathway-independent, mechanism by which deficits in early visual processing contribute to overall cognitive impairment in Sz.