Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation

Chapter

Aberrant Attentional Processes in Schizophrenia as Reflected in Latent Inhibition Data

Robert E. Lubow

in Associative Learning and Conditioning Theory

Published in print March 2011 | ISBN: 9780199735969
Published online May 2011 | e-ISBN: 9780199894529 | DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199735969.003.0048
Aberrant Attentional Processes in Schizophrenia as Reflected in Latent Inhibition Data

Preview

Latent inhibition (LI) is demonstrated when a previously unattended stimulus is less effective in a new learning situation than a novel stimulus. Since LI is reduced by dopamine agonists and increased by dopamine antagonists, and schizophrenic patients often display attentional impairments, LI has come to play an important role in the investigation of information processing deficits in schizophrenia. The chapter reviews the rationale for this approach and summarizes the LI data from schizophrenia patients and healthy groups that are self-rated on traits related to schizophrenia (schizotypality). The review suggests that schizophrenia patients with positive symptoms exhibit attenuated LI, whereas those with negative symptoms show normal or potentiated LI. These effects are accounted for by differences in the ability to shift attention from controlled to automatic processing and the manner in which such shifts are affected by the masking task load.

Keywords: latent inhibition; schizophrenia; schizotypy; positive and negative symptoms; attention; masking task; masking task load; controlled processing; automatic processing

Chapter.  8931 words.  Illustrated.

Subjects: cognitive psychology

Go to Oxford Scholarship Online » abstract

full text: subscription required

How to subscribe Recommend to my Librarian

Buy this work at Oxford University Press »