Castle Peak Hospital, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China.
Neuropsychology and Applied Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Schizophr Bull. 2018 Jan 13;44(1):137-146. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbx026.
The ability to follow spoken instructions is important to everyday functioning but has seldom been studied in patients with schizophrenia (SZ). Recent evidence suggests that action-based processing may facilitate the ability to follow instructions, which relies largely on working memory. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that SZ patients may also benefit from action-based advantages in following instructions. Forty-eight clinically stable SZ patients and 48 demographic- and IQ-matched controls completed a following spoken instruction span task involving varied encoding and recall conditions. While SZ patients were impaired in the overall performance of following spoken instructions, this deficit could be attributed to working memory impairment. More importantly, SZ patients showed action-based advantages both at the encoding and retrieval stage to the same extent as healthy controls. Specifically, both healthy controls and SZ patients showed improved memory performance when they additionally performed the actions, or watched the experimenter carrying out the actions compared with simply listening to spoken instructions during the encoding stage. During the retrieval stage, memory was improved when they recalled the instructions by physical enactment compared with oral repetition. The present study provides the first empirical evidence for the impairment in the ability to follow instructions in SZ. We have shown that involving action-based processing in the encoding and retrieval stage facilitated memory of instructions, indicating that the enactment advantage in working memory also applies to SZ patients. These findings provide useful insights for clinical interventions and cognitive remediation for SZ patients.
跟随口头指令的能力对于日常功能很重要,但在精神分裂症(SZ)患者中很少进行研究。最近的证据表明,基于动作的处理可能有助于很大程度上依赖工作记忆的指令跟随能力。在这项研究中,我们检验了 SZ 患者是否也可以从基于动作的指令跟随优势中受益的假设。48 名临床稳定的 SZ 患者和 48 名年龄和智商匹配的对照者完成了一项涉及不同编码和回忆条件的跟随口头指令跨度任务。虽然 SZ 患者在跟随口头指令的整体表现中受损,但这种缺陷可以归因于工作记忆受损。更重要的是,SZ 患者在编码和检索阶段都表现出基于动作的优势,与健康对照组相同。具体来说,与在编码阶段仅听口头指令相比,健康对照组和 SZ 患者在执行动作或观看实验者执行动作时,记忆表现都得到了改善。在检索阶段,通过身体动作回忆指令时,记忆得到了改善,而口头重复则无法改善。本研究首次为 SZ 患者在指令跟随能力方面的损伤提供了实证证据。我们已经表明,在编码和检索阶段涉及基于动作的处理有助于指令的记忆,这表明工作记忆中的执行优势也适用于 SZ 患者。这些发现为 SZ 患者的临床干预和认知矫正提供了有用的见解。