Motor cognition in schizophrenia: Control of automatic imitation and mapping of action context are reduced.


Journal

Schizophrenia research
ISSN: 1573-2509
Titre abrégé: Schizophr Res
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 8804207

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
02 2022
Historique:
received: 02 03 2021
revised: 09 12 2021
accepted: 14 12 2021
pubmed: 8 1 2022
medline: 29 3 2022
entrez: 7 1 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The ability to imitate is considered impaired in schizophrenia patients. This assumption, however, is based on heterogeneous studies mostly targeting voluntary imitation, e.g., pantomime. Studies on automatic imitation, however, and on underlying mechanisms of top-down inhibition of automatic imitation and contextual modulation in schizophrenia are highly limited. We employed two sensorimotor paradigms to examine imitation-inhibition and action context mapping in 37 schizophrenia patients and 36 matched controls. In the first experiment, participants performed finger lifts while observing a hand executing compatible or incompatible finger lifts from the third-person perspective. The compatibility or incompatibility of these finger lifts affected participants' reaction times (RTs). The comparison of between-condition RT differences shows a larger movement compatibility effect in schizophrenia than in controls. The second experiment involved finger lifts while watching a still hand, from the first-person perspective, with constrained fingers that either corresponded or did not correspond to the participants' response fingers. Here, schizophrenia patients showed a diminished RT slowing in corresponding constraint trials. While the former results provide evidence for an impaired control of imitation in patients with schizophrenia, the latter results indicate a reduced encoding of action context. In conclusion, this study provides the first evidence for deficits of top-down control of imitation and motor context processing in the same sample of schizophrenia patients.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34995996
pii: S0920-9964(21)00508-9
doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2021.12.024
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

116-124

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Armin Rudolph (A)

Department of Psychiatry, Charité University Medicine, Charitéplatz 1, 10117 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address: armin.rudolph@charite.de.

Roman Liepelt (R)

Department of General Psychology, FernUniversität in Hagen, Universitätsstraße 27, 58097 Hagen, Germany. Electronic address: roman.liepelt@fernuni-hagen.de.

Maximilian Kaffes (M)

Department of Neurology, Charité University Medicine, Charitéplatz 1, 10117 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address: maximilian.kaffes@charite.de.

Christina Hofmann-Shen (C)

Department of Psychiatry, Charité University Medicine, Charitéplatz 1, 10117 Berlin, Germany; Department of Neurology, Charité University Medicine, Charitéplatz 1, 10117 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address: christina.hofmann@charite.de.

Christiane Montag (C)

Department of Psychiatry, Charité University Medicine, Charitéplatz 1, 10117 Berlin, Germany. Electronic address: christiane.montag@charite.de.

Andres H Neuhaus (AH)

Department of Psychiatry, Charité University Medicine, Charitéplatz 1, 10117 Berlin, Germany; Department of Psychiatry, Brandenburg Medical School, Fehrbelliner Str. 38, 16816 Neuruppin, Germany. Electronic address: andres.neuhaus@charite.de.

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