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Neural correlates of semantic associations in patients with schizophrenia
Authors:Katharina Sass  Stefan Heim  Olga Sachs  Benjamin Straube  Frank Schneider  Ute Habel  Tilo Kircher
Institution:1. School of Psychology, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Brisbane, 4072, Australia
2. Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Medical School, RWTH Aachen University, Pauwelsstr. 30, 52074, Aachen, Germany
7. JARA, Translational Brain Medicine, Aachen, Germany
3. Institute of Neurosciences and Medicine (INM-1), Research Centre Jülich, Jülich, Germany
4. Section Neurological Cognition Research, Department of Neurology, Medical School, RWTH Aachen University, Pauwelsstr. 30, 52074, Aachen, Germany
5. Committee on the Use of Human Subjects, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
6. Department of Psychiatry und Psychotherapy, Philipps-University Marburg, Rudolf-Bultmann-Stra?e, 35039, Marburg, Germany
Abstract:Patients with schizophrenia have semantic processing disturbances leading to expressive language deficits (formal thought disorder). The underlying pathology has been related to alterations in the semantic network and its neural correlates. Moreover, crossmodal processing, an important aspect of communication, is impaired in schizophrenia. Here we investigated specific processing abnormalities in patients with schizophrenia with regard to modality and semantic distance in a semantic priming paradigm. Fourteen patients with schizophrenia and fourteen demographically matched controls made visual lexical decisions on successively presented word-pairs (SOA = 350 ms) with direct or indirect relations, unrelated word-pairs, and pseudoword-target stimuli during fMRI measurement. Stimuli were presented in a unimodal (visual) or crossmodal (auditory-visual) fashion. On the neural level, the effect of semantic relation indicated differences (patients > controls) within the right angular gyrus and precuneus. The effect of modality revealed differences (controls > patients) within the left superior frontal, middle temporal, inferior occipital, right angular gyri, and anterior cingulate cortex. Semantic distance (direct vs. indirect) induced distinct activations within the left middle temporal, fusiform gyrus, right precuneus, and thalamus with patients showing fewer differences between direct and indirect word-pairs. The results highlight aberrant priming-related brain responses in patients with schizophrenia. Enhanced activation for patients possibly reflects deficits in semantic processes that might be caused by a delayed and enhanced spread of activation within the semantic network. Modality-specific decreases of activation in patients might be related to impaired perceptual integration. Those deficits could induce and increase the prominent symptoms of schizophrenia like impaired speech processing.
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