Kozáková Eva, Bakštein Eduard, Havlíček Ondřej, Bečev Ondřej, Knytl Pavel, Zaytseva Yuliya, Španiel Filip
Department of Applied Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, National Institute of Mental Health, Klecany, Czechia.
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Prague, Czechia.
Front Psychiatry. 2020 Dec 18;11:570570. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.570570. eCollection 2020.
Schizophrenia is often characterized by a general disruption of self-processing and self-demarcation. Previous studies have shown that self-monitoring and sense of agency (SoA, i.e., the ability to recognize one's own actions correctly) are altered in schizophrenia patients. However, research findings are inconclusive in regards to how SoA alterations are linked to clinical symptoms and their severity, or cognitive factors. In a longitudinal study, we examined 161 first-episode schizophrenia patients and 154 controls with a continuous-report SoA task and a control task testing general cognitive/sensorimotor processes. Clinical symptoms were assessed with the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS). In comparison to controls, patients performed worse in terms of recognition of self-produced movements even when controlling for confounding factors. Patients' SoA score correlated with the severity of PANSS-derived "Disorganized" symptoms and with a priori defined symptoms related to self-disturbances. In the follow-up, the changes in the two subscales were significantly associated with the change in SoA performance. We corroborated previous findings of altered SoA already in the early stage of schizophrenia. Decreased ability to recognize self-produced actions was associated with the severity of symptoms in two complementary domains: self-disturbances and disorganization. While the involvement of the former might indicate impairment in self-monitoring, the latter suggests the role of higher cognitive processes such as information updating or cognitive flexibility. The SoA alterations in schizophrenia are associated, at least partially, with the intensity of respective symptoms in a state-dependent manner.
精神分裂症通常表现为自我加工和自我界定的普遍紊乱。先前的研究表明,精神分裂症患者的自我监测和能动性(即正确识别自己行为的能力)会发生改变。然而,关于能动性改变如何与临床症状及其严重程度或认知因素相关联,研究结果尚无定论。在一项纵向研究中,我们使用连续报告能动性任务和测试一般认知/感觉运动过程的对照任务,对161例首发精神分裂症患者和154名对照者进行了检查。使用阳性和阴性症状量表(PANSS)评估临床症状。与对照者相比,即使在控制混杂因素的情况下,患者在识别自己产生的动作方面表现更差。患者的能动性得分与PANSS衍生的“紊乱”症状的严重程度以及与预先定义的与自我干扰相关的症状相关。在随访中,两个子量表的变化与能动性表现的变化显著相关。我们证实了先前关于精神分裂症早期阶段能动性改变的研究结果。识别自己产生动作的能力下降与两个互补领域的症状严重程度相关:自我干扰和紊乱。虽然前者的参与可能表明自我监测受损,但后者表明了更高认知过程如信息更新或认知灵活性的作用。精神分裂症中的能动性改变至少部分地以状态依赖的方式与相应症状的强度相关。