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Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia

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Citations

16

References

1982

Year

TLDR

Interest in schizophrenia’s negative symptoms—such as affective flattening and speech impoverishment—has surged, yet research has been limited by the lack of a standardized assessment tool. The study introduces the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms. The scale demonstrates excellent interrater reliability and good internal consistency across its five symptom complexes—affective flattening, alogia, avolition, anhedonia, and attentional impairment—indicating a cohesive conceptual structure.

Abstract

Recently, a renaissance of interest in "negative symptoms," eg, affective flattening or impoverishment of speech and language, has occurred. Although some investigators believe that these symptoms are important indicators of outcome, of response to treatment, and perhaps of a distinct, underlying pathologic process, research on the negative-symptom syndrome in schizophrenia has been handicapped because no standard instrument existed to assess it. This investigation reports on the developed Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms. When symptoms are defined by objective behavioral indices, they have excellent interrater reliability. Furthermore, the five symptom complexes defined by the scale (affective flattening, alogia, avolition, anhedonia, and attentional impairment) have good internal consistency, which indicates that the conceptual organization of the scale is also cohesive.

References

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