98 research outputs found
The perception of self-produced sensory stimuli in patients with auditory hallucinations and passivity experiences: evidence for a breakdown in self-monitoring
BACKGROUND: To test the hypothesis that certain psychotic symptomatology is due to a defect in self-monitoring, we investigated the ability of groups of psychiatric patients to differentiate perceptually between self-produced and externally produced tactile stimuli. METHODS: Responses to tactile stimulation were assessed in three groups of subjects: schizophrenic patients; patients with bipolar affective disorder or depression; and normal control subjects. Within the psychiatric groups subjects were divided on the basis of the presence or absence of auditory hallucinations and/or passivity experiences. The subjects were asked to rate the perception of a tactile sensation on the palm of their left hand. The tactile stimulation was either self-produced by movement of the subject's right hand or externally produced by the experimenter. RESULTS: Normal control subjects and those psychiatric patients with neither auditory hallucinations nor passivity phenomena experienced self-produced stimuli as less intense, tickly and pleasant than identical, externally produced tactile stimuli. In contrast, psychiatric patients with these symptoms did not show a decrease in their perceptual ratings for tactile stimuli produced by themselves as compared with those produced by the experimenter. This failure to show a difference in perception between self-produced and externally produced stimuli appears to relate to the presence of auditory hallucinations and/or passivity experiences rather than to the diagnosis of schizophrenia. CONCLUSIONS: We propose that auditory hallucinations and passivity experiences are associated with an abnormality in the self-monitoring mechanism that normally allows us to distinguish self-produced from externally produced sensations
Complications of pregnancy and delivery in relation to psychosis in adult life: data from the British perinatal mortality survey sample
Original article can be found at: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/tocrender.fcgi?iid=137629 Copyright BMJ PublishingTo evaluate whether events occurring at or around the time of birth contribute to the onset of psychotic illness in adult life.Peer reviewe
Cortical Surface Area Differentiates Familial High Risk Individuals Who Go on to Develop Schizophrenia
BACKGROUND: Schizophrenia is associated with structural brain abnormalities that may be present before disease
onset. It remains unclear whether these represent general vulnerability indicators or are associated with the clinical state itself.
METHODS: To investigate this, structural brain scans were acquired at two time points (mean scan interval
1.87 years) in a cohort of individuals at high familial risk of schizophrenia (n 5 142) and control subjects (n 5 36).
Cortical reconstructions were generated using FreeSurfer. The high-risk cohort was subdivided into individuals that
remained well during the study, individuals that had transient psychotic symptoms, and individuals that subsequently
became ill. Baseline measures and longitudinal change in global estimates of thickness and surface area and lobar
values were compared, focusing on overall differences between high-risk individuals and control subjects and then
on group differences within the high-risk cohort.
RESULTS: Longitudinally, control subjects showed a significantly greater reduction in cortical surface area
compared with the high-risk group. Within the high-risk group, differences in surface area at baseline predicted
clinical course, with individuals that subsequently became ill having significantly larger surface area than individuals
that remained well during the study. For thickness, longitudinal reductions were most prominent in the frontal,
cingulate, and occipital lobes in all high-risk individuals compared with control subjects.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that larger surface areas at baseline may be associated with mechanisms that
go above and beyond a general familial disposition. A relative preservation over time of surface area, coupled with a
thinning of the cortex compared with control subjects, may serve as vulnerability markers of schizophrenia
Causal categories: relativistically interacting processes
A symmetric monoidal category naturally arises as the mathematical structure
that organizes physical systems, processes, and composition thereof, both
sequentially and in parallel. This structure admits a purely graphical
calculus. This paper is concerned with the encoding of a fixed causal structure
within a symmetric monoidal category: causal dependencies will correspond to
topological connectedness in the graphical language. We show that correlations,
either classical or quantum, force terminality of the tensor unit. We also show
that well-definedness of the concept of a global state forces the monoidal
product to be only partially defined, which in turn results in a relativistic
covariance theorem. Except for these assumptions, at no stage do we assume
anything more than purely compositional symmetric-monoidal categorical
structure. We cast these two structural results in terms of a mathematical
entity, which we call a `causal category'. We provide methods of constructing
causal categories, and we study the consequences of these methods for the
general framework of categorical quantum mechanics.Comment: 43 pages, lots of figure
Childhood antecedents of schizophrenia and affective illness: social adjustment at ages 7 and 11
Original article can be found at: http://www.bmj.com/ Copyright BMJ PublishingTo investigate the social adjustment in childhood of people who as adults have psychiatric disorders. Design - Subjects in a prospectively followed up cohort (the national child development study) who had been admitted as adults to psychiatric hospitals were compared with the rest of the cohort on ratings of social behaviour made by teachers at the ages of 7 and 11 years.Peer reviewe
Life events in suicide and undetermined death in south-east Scotland: a case-control study using the method of psychological autopsy
Background: Adverse life events have been associated with increased risk of suicide. Mental disorders are also major risk factors for suicide. Matching cases and controls for mental disorder is thus appropriate in studies of suicide. This procedure was used to study the degree to which excess adversity was more common in cases who committed suicide as opposed to living controls matched for mental disorder. Methods: The study formed part of a retrospective case-control comparison of cases of suicide/undetermined death with living controls using psychological autopsy in south-east Scotland. Cases and controls were matched for age, sex and mental disorder. Informants were those closest to cases and controls. Cases and controls were assessed for life events using the Interview for Life Events. The subjects were 45 cases of suicide/undetermined death and 40 living controls. Results: Cases and controls did not differ significantly in severity of mental disorder. Adverse interpersonal events within the family (P=0.01) with an odds ratio (OR) of 9.0 (95% CI, 1.3–399) and adverse physical health-related events (OR 5.0, 95% CI 1.1–47, P=0.04) were significantly more common in cases than controls. Conclusions: Cases had significantly more adverse life events than controls overall. The categories accounting for these differences were interpersonal family adversity and physical ill-health. There were no significant differences in either the number or severity of ongoing difficulties between cases and controls. Recent adverse life events contribute to the increased risk of suicide even when age, sex and mental disorder are controlled for. Future research should examine interactions between social support and acute and chronic adversity
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