Sereno A B, Holzman P S
Harvard University, Department of Psychology.
Biol Psychiatry. 1995 Mar 15;37(6):394-401. doi: 10.1016/0006-3223(94)00127-O.
Saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movements were recorded in schizophrenic patients, nonschizophrenic psychiatric patients, and normal controls. Both schizophrenic subjects and psychiatric controls demonstrated greater increases in error rates and greater delays in generating antisaccades than did normal controls. Schizophrenic patients with impaired smooth pursuit tracking showed greater increases in error rates in the antisaccade task than did schizophrenic patients with normal pursuit. Among psychiatric controls, increased errors on the antisaccade task were unrelated to pursuit performance. The small size of this group, however, reduces the power to detect a relation between smooth pursuit tracking and performance on the antisaccade task. Although most patients were receiving one or more medications, some of which can affect eye movements, medication state in this study did not account for differences we report in dependent variables.
我们记录了精神分裂症患者、非精神分裂症精神病患者和正常对照组的扫视和平稳跟踪眼球运动。与正常对照组相比,精神分裂症患者和精神病对照组在产生反扫视时的错误率增加幅度更大,延迟时间更长。平稳跟踪受损的精神分裂症患者在反扫视任务中的错误率增加幅度大于平稳跟踪正常的精神分裂症患者。在精神病对照组中,反扫视任务中的错误增加与跟踪表现无关。然而,该组样本量较小,降低了检测平稳跟踪与反扫视任务表现之间关系的效力。尽管大多数患者正在服用一种或多种可能影响眼球运动的药物,但本研究中的用药状态并不能解释我们在因变量中报告的差异。