Centre for Clinical Research in Neuropsychiatry, Graylands Hospital, Mail Bag No 1, Claremont, Perth, 6910, Australia.
Schizophr Bull. 2012 Jun;38(4):741-50. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbq144. Epub 2010 Dec 8.
Theories about auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia suggest that these experiences occur because patients fail to recognize thoughts and mental events as self-generated. Different theoretical models have been proposed about the cognitive mechanisms underlying auditory hallucinations. Regardless of the cognitive model being tested, however, experimental designs are almost identical in that they require a judgment regarding whether an action was self-originated or not. The aim of the current study was to integrate all available literature for a meta-analysis on this topic and reach conclusions about self-recognition performance in (1) patients with schizophrenia compared with healthy controls and (2) patients with auditory hallucinations compared with patients without these symptoms. A comprehensive literature review identified 23 studies that contrasted the performance of schizophrenia patients with healthy controls (1370 participants) and 9 studies that directly compared patients with and without auditory hallucinations (315 participants). We found significantly reduced self-recognition performance in schizophrenia patients, which was more pronounced in patients with auditory hallucinations compared with patients without. In patients with hallucinations, this pattern of performance was specific to self-recognition processes and not to the recognition of new external information. A striking finding was the homogeneity in results across studies regardless of the action modality, timing delay, and design used to measure self-recognition. In summary, this review of studies from the last 30 years substantiates the view that self-recognition is impaired in patients with schizophrenia and particularly those with auditory hallucinations. This suggests an association, perhaps a causal one, between such deficit and hallucinatory experiences in schizophrenia.
精神分裂症听觉幻觉的理论表明,这些体验发生是因为患者无法将思维和心理事件识别为自我产生的。已经提出了不同的理论模型来解释听觉幻觉背后的认知机制。然而,无论测试的认知模型如何,实验设计几乎都是相同的,因为它们都需要判断一个动作是否是自我产生的。本研究的目的是整合关于这个主题的所有可用文献进行荟萃分析,并得出以下结论:(1)与健康对照组相比,精神分裂症患者的自我识别表现;(2)与没有这些症状的患者相比,有听觉幻觉的患者的自我识别表现。全面的文献回顾确定了 23 项研究,这些研究将精神分裂症患者的表现与健康对照组进行了对比(1370 名参与者),并直接比较了有和没有听觉幻觉的患者的 9 项研究(315 名参与者)。我们发现精神分裂症患者的自我识别表现明显降低,而有听觉幻觉的患者比没有听觉幻觉的患者更为明显。在有幻觉的患者中,这种表现模式是特定于自我识别过程的,而不是新的外部信息的识别。一个引人注目的发现是,无论使用的动作模态、时间延迟和设计如何,研究结果在不同研究之间都是高度一致的。总之,这项对过去 30 年研究的综述证实了精神分裂症患者的自我识别受损的观点,特别是那些有听觉幻觉的患者。这表明这种缺陷与精神分裂症中的幻觉体验之间存在关联,也许是因果关系。