Kort Naomi S, Ford Judith M, Roach Brian J, Gunduz-Bruce Handan, Krystal John H, Jaeger Judith, Reinhart Robert M G, Mathalon Daniel H
University of California, San Francisco.
University of California, San Francisco; San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
Biol Psychiatry. 2017 Mar 15;81(6):514-524. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2016.06.019. Epub 2016 Jul 1.
Recent theoretical models of schizophrenia posit that dysfunction of the neural mechanisms subserving predictive coding contributes to symptoms and cognitive deficits, and this dysfunction is further posited to result from N-methyl-D-aspartate glutamate receptor (NMDAR) hypofunction. Previously, by examining auditory cortical responses to self-generated speech sounds, we demonstrated that predictive coding during vocalization is disrupted in schizophrenia. To test the hypothesized contribution of NMDAR hypofunction to this disruption, we examined the effects of the NMDAR antagonist, ketamine, on predictive coding during vocalization in healthy volunteers and compared them with the effects of schizophrenia.
In two separate studies, the N1 component of the event-related potential elicited by speech sounds during vocalization (talk) and passive playback (listen) were compared to assess the degree of N1 suppression during vocalization, a putative measure of auditory predictive coding. In the crossover study, 31 healthy volunteers completed two randomly ordered test days, a saline day and a ketamine day. Event-related potentials during the talk/listen task were obtained before infusion and during infusion on both days, and N1 amplitudes were compared across days. In the case-control study, N1 amplitudes from 34 schizophrenia patients and 33 healthy control volunteers were compared.
N1 suppression to self-produced vocalizations was significantly and similarly diminished by ketamine (Cohen's d = 1.14) and schizophrenia (Cohen's d = .85).
Disruption of NMDARs causes dysfunction in predictive coding during vocalization in a manner similar to the dysfunction observed in schizophrenia patients, consistent with the theorized contribution of NMDAR hypofunction to predictive coding deficits in schizophrenia.
精神分裂症的最新理论模型认为,支持预测编码的神经机制功能障碍会导致症状和认知缺陷,并且这种功能障碍进一步被认为是由N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸谷氨酸受体(NMDAR)功能低下引起的。此前,通过检查听觉皮层对自我产生的语音声音的反应,我们证明了精神分裂症患者在发声过程中的预测编码受到破坏。为了测试NMDAR功能低下对这种破坏的假设作用,我们研究了NMDAR拮抗剂氯胺酮对健康志愿者发声过程中预测编码的影响,并将其与精神分裂症患者的影响进行比较。
在两项独立研究中,比较了发声(说话)和被动播放(聆听)过程中语音诱发的事件相关电位的N1成分,以评估发声过程中N1抑制的程度,这是听觉预测编码的一种假定指标。在交叉研究中,31名健康志愿者完成了两个随机排序的测试日,一个生理盐水日和一个氯胺酮日。在这两天的输注前和输注过程中获取说话/聆听任务期间的事件相关电位,并比较两天的N1振幅。在病例对照研究中,比较了34名精神分裂症患者和33名健康对照志愿者的N1振幅。
氯胺酮(Cohen's d = 1.14)和精神分裂症(Cohen's d = 0.85)对自我产生声音的N1抑制均显著且相似地减弱。
NMDAR的破坏导致发声过程中预测编码功能障碍,其方式与在精神分裂症患者中观察到的功能障碍相似,这与NMDAR功能低下对精神分裂症预测编码缺陷的理论作用一致。