From the Brain Centre Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands (Prikken, Baalbergen, Hillegers, Kahn, Van Haren); the Utrecht University, Department of Psychology, Utrecht, the Netherlands (Van der Weiden, Aarts); the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry/Psychology, Sophia Children’s Hospital, Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, the Netherlands (Hillegers); and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Department of Psychiatry, New York, NY (Kahn).
J Psychiatry Neurosci. 2019 May 1;44(3):177-184. doi: 10.1503/jpn.180049.
Schizophrenia is a disorder of basic self-disturbance. Evidence suggests that people with schizophrenia may have aberrant experiences of body ownership: they may feel that they are not the subject of their own body experiences. However, little is known about the development of such disturbances.
Using a rubber hand illusion paradigm, we assessed body ownership in patients with schizophrenia (n = 54), healthy controls (n = 56), children/adolescents at increased familial risk of developing schizophrenia (n = 24) or mood disorders (n = 33), and children/adolescents without this risk (n = 18). In this paradigm, a rubber hand (visible) and a participant’s real hand (invisible) were stroked synchronously and asynchronously; we then measured subjective illusory experiences and proprioceptive drift.
All groups showed the expected effect of the rubber hand illusion: stronger proprioceptive drift and increased subjective illusory experiences after synchronous versus asynchronous stroking. The effect of synchronicity on subjective experiences was significantly weaker in patients with schizophrenia than in healthy controls, and subjective ratings were positively correlated with delusions in patients. We found no significant differences between children/adolescents with and without increased familial risk.
Large individual differences raised questions for future research.
We found subtle disturbances in body-ownership experiences in patients with schizophrenia, which were associated with delusions. We found no evidence for impairments in children/adolescents at increased familial risk of developing schizophrenia or a mood disorder. Longitudinal data might reveal whether impairments in body ownership are predictive of psychosis onset.
精神分裂症是一种基本自我紊乱的疾病。有证据表明,精神分裂症患者可能会出现异常的身体所有权体验:他们可能会觉得自己不是自己身体体验的主体。然而,对于这种干扰的发展知之甚少。
我们使用橡胶手错觉范式评估了精神分裂症患者(n=54)、健康对照组(n=56)、有精神分裂症家族发病风险的儿童/青少年(n=24)或心境障碍(n=33)以及无此风险的儿童/青少年(n=18)的身体所有权。在这个范式中,一只橡胶手(可见)和参与者的真实手(不可见)被同步和异步地抚摸;然后我们测量了主观的错觉体验和本体感受漂移。
所有组都表现出橡胶手错觉的预期效果:同步刺激比异步刺激产生更强的本体感受漂移和更多的主观错觉体验。与健康对照组相比,精神分裂症患者的同步对主观体验的影响明显较弱,主观评分与患者的妄想呈正相关。我们在有和没有家族发病风险增加的儿童/青少年之间没有发现显著差异。
大的个体差异为未来的研究提出了问题。
我们发现精神分裂症患者的身体所有权体验存在细微的干扰,这些干扰与妄想有关。我们没有发现有精神分裂症或心境障碍家族发病风险增加的儿童/青少年存在身体所有权受损的证据。纵向数据可能会揭示身体所有权的损伤是否可以预测精神病的发作。