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Smooth Pursuit Eye Movements, Attention, and Schizophrenia
181
Citations
8
References
1976
Year
NeuropsychologyInhibitory ProcessAffective NeuroscienceSelective AttentionNeuropsychiatryAttentionPsychologySocial SciencesFocused AttentionPsychophysiologyVoluntary AttentionCognitive NeuroscienceInattentional BlindnessCognitive ScienceBlindsightBehavioral NeuroscienceFirstdegree RelativesVision ResearchExperimental PsychologyPsychotic DisorderVisual FunctionAttention ControlCognitive DysfunctionEye TrackingSchizophreniaNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryMedicine
• In previous studies, smooth pursuit eye movements (SPEM) have been shown to be disordered in about 70% of schizophrenics and about 45% of their first-degree relatives. In this report, the role of attention in these eye movements is addressed in three experiments (using as subjects schizophrenics, their firstdegree relatives, and normals administered chloral hydrate) that recruit focused attention to the task. These studies show that voluntary attention in the form of inattention, "heedless negligence," or failure to cooperate, is not the specific attentional quality that is disordered in SPEM of schizophrenics and their relatives. Rather, the data both indicate that nonvoluntary attending is specifically disordered in these persons, and implicate a neurophysiological substrate that can be described as a failure of inhibitory, synchronizing or integrating systems which may be located in the brain stem.
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