Is semantic fluency differentially impaired in schizophrenic patients withdelusions?

Citation
Sl. Rossell et al., Is semantic fluency differentially impaired in schizophrenic patients withdelusions?, J CL EXP N, 21(5), 1999, pp. 629-642
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology,Neurology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
ISSN journal
13803395 → ACNP
Volume
21
Issue
5
Year of publication
1999
Pages
629 - 642
Database
ISI
SICI code
1380-3395(199910)21:5<629:ISFDII>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The study of cognitive deficits in schizophrenia has recently focused upon semantics: the study of meaning. Delusions are a plausible manifestation of abnormal semantics because by definition they involve changes in personal meaning and belief. A symptom-based approach was used to investigate semant ic and phonological fluency in a group of schizophrenic patients subdivided into those with delusions and those with no current delusions. The results demonstrated that deluded patients only were differentially impaired on a test of semantic fluency in comparison to phonological fluency. All subject s showed the same decline in performance over the time course of both tests indicating that retrieval speed in schizophrenia is no different from that of normal controls. Further analysis of word associations in two semantic categories (animals and body parts), revealed that deluded subjects have a more idiosyncratic organisation for animals. The findings of reduced semant ic fluency production and poor logical word associations may represent a di sorganised storage of semantic information in deluded patients, which in tu rn affects efficient access.