Visual search in schizophrenia: latent inhibition and novel pop-out effects

RE Lubow, O Kaplan, P Abramovich, A Rudnick… - Schizophrenia …, 2000 - Elsevier
RE Lubow, O Kaplan, P Abramovich, A Rudnick, N Laor
Schizophrenia research, 2000Elsevier
A visual search task was used to assess attentional function in a mixed group of
schizophrenic patients and in normal controls. Subjects identified presence or absence of a
unique shape presented with homogeneous distractors. Response time (RT) was examined
as a function of prior experience with target, distractor, or both. On each trial, targets and/or
distractors were either novel or familiar. Schizophrenic patients were slower than controls in
all conditions. In the test phase, three target/distractor conditions were examined (PE—target …
A visual search task was used to assess attentional function in a mixed group of schizophrenic patients and in normal controls. Subjects identified presence or absence of a unique shape presented with homogeneous distractors. Response time (RT) was examined as a function of prior experience with target, distractor, or both. On each trial, targets and/or distractors were either novel or familiar. Schizophrenic patients were slower than controls in all conditions. In the test phase, three target/distractor conditions were examined (PE — target and distractors pre-exposed but reversed; NPE — target novel and distractors pre-exposed; NOV — novel target and distractors). As predicted, normal controls, but not schizophrenics, showed latent inhibition (LI: PE minus NPE). The latter finding was due to the absence of normal LI in female patients. A novel pop-out effect (NOV minus NPE) was obtained which did not interact with any of the other variables. The results suggest that the LI effect is indeed related to the processing of irrelevant stimuli, and that, at least female schizophrenic patients process such stimuli differently from controls. Past inconsistencies in the LI-schizophrenia literature may be the result of disproportionate gender compositions in patient and control groups.
Elsevier