Opposite-direction spatial working memory biases in people with schizophrenia and healthy controls.

Working memory adaptation effects serial dependence

Journal

Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging
ISSN: 2451-9030
Titre abrégé: Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101671285

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
28 Sep 2024
Historique:
received: 04 06 2024
revised: 16 09 2024
accepted: 22 09 2024
medline: 1 10 2024
pubmed: 1 10 2024
entrez: 30 9 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

People with schizophrenia (PSZ) show Impaired accuracy in spatial working memory (SWM), thought to reflect abnormalities in the sustained firing of feature selective neurons that are critical for successful encoding and maintenance processes. Recent research has documented a new source of variance in the accuracy of SWM: In healthy adults, SWM representations are unconsciously biased by prior trials such that current-trial responses are attracted to previous-trial responses (serial dependence). This opens a new window to examine how schizophrenia impacts both the sustained neural firing representing the current-trial target and longer-term synaptic plasticity that stores previous-trial information. We examined response accuracy in a single-item SWM test with delay intervals of 0, 2, 4, or 8 seconds in 41 PSZ and 32 demographically similar healthy controls (HCS). Our main dependent variable was the bias index, which quantifies the extent to which the current-trial responses were biased toward or away from the previous-trial target. PSZ showed opposite-direction serial dependence bias effects: HCS showed an attractive bias which increased over increasing delays whereas PSZ showed a repulsion bias that increased over delays. In PSZ, the magnitude of the repulsion bias correlated negatively with broad measures of cognitive ability and WM capacity. PSZ show opposite-direction effects of previous trials on WM. Such qualitatively distinct differences in performance are extremely rare in psychopathology and may index a fundamental alteration in neural processing that could serve as a valuable biomarker for pathophysiology and treatment development research.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
People with schizophrenia (PSZ) show Impaired accuracy in spatial working memory (SWM), thought to reflect abnormalities in the sustained firing of feature selective neurons that are critical for successful encoding and maintenance processes. Recent research has documented a new source of variance in the accuracy of SWM: In healthy adults, SWM representations are unconsciously biased by prior trials such that current-trial responses are attracted to previous-trial responses (serial dependence). This opens a new window to examine how schizophrenia impacts both the sustained neural firing representing the current-trial target and longer-term synaptic plasticity that stores previous-trial information.
METHODS METHODS
We examined response accuracy in a single-item SWM test with delay intervals of 0, 2, 4, or 8 seconds in 41 PSZ and 32 demographically similar healthy controls (HCS). Our main dependent variable was the bias index, which quantifies the extent to which the current-trial responses were biased toward or away from the previous-trial target.
RESULTS RESULTS
PSZ showed opposite-direction serial dependence bias effects: HCS showed an attractive bias which increased over increasing delays whereas PSZ showed a repulsion bias that increased over delays. In PSZ, the magnitude of the repulsion bias correlated negatively with broad measures of cognitive ability and WM capacity.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
PSZ show opposite-direction effects of previous trials on WM. Such qualitatively distinct differences in performance are extremely rare in psychopathology and may index a fundamental alteration in neural processing that could serve as a valuable biomarker for pathophysiology and treatment development research.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39349178
pii: S2451-9022(24)00276-3
doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.09.008
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Auteurs

James M Gold (JM)

Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine. Electronic address: jgold@som.umaryland.edu.

Sonia Bansal (S)

Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Benjamin Robinson (B)

Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Alan Anticevic (A)

Department of Psychiatry, Yale University.

Steven J Luck (SJ)

Center for Mind and Brain, Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis.

Classifications MeSH