PMID: 16633452Apr 25, 2006Paper

The antisaccade task and neuropsychological tests of prefrontal cortical integrity in schizophrenia: empirical findings and interpretative considerations.

World Psychiatry : Official Journal of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA)
Deborah L LevyPhilip S Holzman

Abstract

To date, every published study of the antisaccade task has replicated the finding that schizophrenia patients make an increased number of errors. This finding has been interpreted as support for frontal and/or basal ganglia dysfunction in schizophrenia, primarily because neurological patients with pathology in these brain regions also make large numbers of errors on the antisaccade task. Here, we compared the performance of schizophrenia patients and nonpsychiatric controls on an antisaccade task and on two neuropsychological tests, the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, which is assumed to tap frontal lobe functioning, and the interference condition of the Stroop Test, which is thought to tap dorsolateral prefrontal cortex/anterior cingulate functioning. We examined the pattern of intercorrelations among these tasks. Schizophrenia patients made significantly more errors on the antisaccade task, made more perseverative errors and achieved fewer categories on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, and were significantly slower during the interference condition of the Stroop Test than were nonpsychiatric controls. Antisaccade errors were significantly correlated with interference performance on the Stroop in schizophrenia patients and in con...Continue Reading

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