Attention and Information Processing in Schizophrenia

Wiley - Tập 15 Số 2 - Trang 199-209 - 1976
Anthony S. David

Tóm tắt

The performance of 20 acute schizophrenics and 10 depressives, matched for age, verbal intelligence and pre‐morbid functioning, was assessed on a choice reaction‐time card‐sorting task. Stimulus and response uncertainty were varied independently, and there were two main conditions, distraction and no distraction. The schizophrenics were slower than the depressives over all the functions examined in the study. Schizophrenics were significantly more affected by increases in response uncertainty than the depressives. Although there was a tendency for the schizophrenic group to be more affected by distraction and by increasing stimulus uncertainty, these differences were not significant. There was no significant interaction between the effects of stimulus and response uncertainty, nor between the effects of distraction and stimulus uncertainty. The effects of distraction increased with increasing response uncertainty. The results are discussed in relation to two models of information processing, suggested by Broadbent (1971) and by Sternberg (1969). Such models allow a more detailed examination of the cognitive abnormalities found in schizophrenia.

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