Prentice Kristen J, Gold James M, Buchanan Robert W
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Maryland Psychiatric Research Center, P.O. Box 21247, Baltimore, MD 21228, USA.
Schizophr Res. 2008 Nov;106(1):81-7. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2007.07.015. Epub 2007 Oct 22.
Schizophrenia (SZ) patients' low scores on the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) are often attributed to frequent perseverative errors, a pattern typically interpreted as a failure to shift from previously rewarded behavior in response to negative feedback. In this study we tested the hypothesis that SZ patients, due to dysregulated error-processing mechanisms, are more fundamentally impaired in their on-line, trial-to-trial use of feedback to guide behavior.
Analysis of archival WCST data from 145 adults with schizophrenia and 80 healthy comparison subjects.
Schizophrenia patients' impaired use of negative feedback was evident on the first four WCST cards, where they were significantly less accurate than comparison subjects. Performance on these early cards significantly predicted overall task success as indexed by categories completed and proportion of perseverative errors.
Patients' poor performance on pre-shift WCST trials likely reflects a fundamental impairment in the ability to use feedback to guide behavior. Recent data from both humans and primates suggest that reward-based learning processes like those employed in the WCST are driven by phasic changes in midbrain dopamine activity. It might, therefore, be possible to interpret higher order executive dysfunction in schizophrenia as a manifestation of altered DA signaling.
精神分裂症(SZ)患者在威斯康星卡片分类测验(WCST)中得分较低,这通常归因于频繁的持续性错误,这种模式通常被解释为在接收到负面反馈后无法从先前得到奖励的行为中转换过来。在本研究中,我们检验了这样一个假设,即SZ患者由于错误处理机制失调,在逐次试验中在线利用反馈来指导行为方面存在更根本的损害。
对145名成年精神分裂症患者和80名健康对照者的存档WCST数据进行分析。
精神分裂症患者在WCST的前四张卡片上就明显表现出对负面反馈的利用受损,他们的准确性显著低于对照者。这些早期卡片上的表现显著预测了以完成的类别和持续性错误比例为指标的总体任务成功率。
患者在转换前的WCST试验中表现不佳,可能反映了利用反馈指导行为能力的根本损害。来自人类和灵长类动物的最新数据表明,像WCST中所采用的基于奖励的学习过程是由中脑多巴胺活动的阶段性变化驱动的。因此,有可能将精神分裂症中的高阶执行功能障碍解释为多巴胺信号改变的一种表现。