Publication | Closed Access
Attentional Performance in Positive- and Negative-Symptom Schizophrenia
76
Citations
0
References
1986
Year
Cognitive ScienceNeuropsychologyPsychiatric EvaluationPsychiatryPsychotic DisorderMedicineSelective AttentionPsychologySchizophreniaSignificant DeficitsSocial SciencesBiological PsychiatryPsychiatric DisorderAttentionCognitive NeuroscienceSelective Attention DeficitsPsychopathologyAttentional Performance
Two tasks designed to measure selective attention were administered to schizophrenics, patients with bipolar disorder, and normal subjects. Schizophrenics were divided into three subgroups: positive-, negative-, and mixed-symptom patients. Positive-symptom schizophrenics showed significant deficits on a digit-span task when compared to normal subjects. Furthermore, the positive group was the only one to show a significant performance decrement in the distraction condition of the digit-span task. There were no significant group differences in performance on a dichotic listening test. The results of the present study are contrary to the hypothesis that selective attention deficits are characteristic of negative-symptom schizophrenia. Instead, the findings suggest that positive symptoms are associated with greater susceptibility to distraction.