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Journal Article

Citation

Schreiber H, Rothmeier J, Becker W, Jürgens R, Born J, Stolz-Born G, Westphal KP, Kornhuber HH. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 1995; 91(3): 195-201.

Affiliation

Department of Neurology, University of Ulm, RKU Hospital, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7625195

Abstract

This study is aimed at detecting biological markers for schizophrenia. For this purpose, a total of 70 subjects (21 schizophrenic patients, 27 first-degree relatives and 22 controls) performed a series of tests assessing various attentional, psychomotor and cognitive functions and saccadic eye movements. The schizophrenics performed significantly poorer than both high-risk and control subjects in most of the tests demanding attention, concentration and psychomotor speed (d2 concentration test, reaction times and Stroop test of perceptual interference) as well as cognition (Wechsler intelligence scales). On the other hand, these tests did not differentiate between the high-risk and control subjects. This distinction, however, could be made by two other parameters: hypometria score of saccadic eye movements and ratio of verbal to performance intelligence scores. Both parameters were significantly increased in both the schizophrenic and the high-risk group, distinguishing both from the control group. The relevance of these findings in indicating a schizophrenic disposition is discussed.


Language: en

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