Ability; however, they would differ from controls by not showing a typical pattern of enhanced recognition for adjectives processed in reference to self.NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptMETHODSParticipants Twenty-five patients with schizophrenia and twenty-two healthy controls were recruited from a larger NIMH study of early visual processing in schizophrenia. Schizophrenia patients were 18?0 years of age and recruited from outpatient clinics at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System (VAGLAHS) and through local board and care facilities. Patients were clinically stable, medicated, and received the Structural Clinical Interview for DSV-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I) to purchase NIK333 confirm diagnosis of schizophrenia. Exclusion criteria for patients were: (1) substance abuse or dependence in the last 6 months, (2) mental retardation, (3) history of loss of consciousness > 1 hour, (4) identifiable neurological disorder, and (5) not sufficiently fluent in XR9576MedChemExpress XR9576 English to comprehend instructions. We assessed clinical symptoms using the expanded Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and examined the BPRS total score, as well as BPRS mean subscores for positive symptoms (thinking disturbance factor), negative symptoms (withdrawal-retardation factor), and depression/ anxiety . Normal control participants were recruited through flyers posted in the local community, newspaper advertisements, and website postings. Exclusion criteria for control participants were: (1) history of schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, bipolar disorder, recurrent depression, history of substance dependence, or any substance abuse in the last 6 months based on the SCID, (2) avoidant, paranoid, schizoid, or schizotypal personality disorders based on the SCID-II, (3) schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder in a first-degree relative, (4) significant neurological disorder or head injury, and (5) not sufficiently fluent in English to comprehend instructions. Efforts were made to group match controls and patients based on sex, age, and parental education. SCID and BPRS interviewers were thoroughly trained to a minimum kappa of 0.75 through the Treatment Unit of the Desert Pacific Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center, and participated in continuous quality assurance procedures. Participants were evaluated for the capacity to give informed consent and provided written informed consent after all procedures were fully explained, according to procedures approved by the institutional review boards at UCLA and VAGLAHS. Procedure Stimuli–We selected 156 different personality-trait adjectives from a validated list . Six lists of 26 adjectives were constructed for the self-referential memory task. Within each of the 6 lists, half of the words were positive (i.e. high desirability) and half were negative (i.e. low desirability). The average number of letters and syllables per word was comparable between valences and across the six lists. Self-referential memory task–The self-referential memory task consisted of two phases: encoding and recognition. The encoding phase included trials drawn from three separate conditions: structural, social desirability, and self-referential. In the structural processing condition, participants judged whether the letters of the word were presented in uppercase or lowercase. In the social desirability condition, participants judged whether the trait was socially desirable for other people in general.Ability; however, they would differ from controls by not showing a typical pattern of enhanced recognition for adjectives processed in reference to self.NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author ManuscriptMETHODSParticipants Twenty-five patients with schizophrenia and twenty-two healthy controls were recruited from a larger NIMH study of early visual processing in schizophrenia. Schizophrenia patients were 18?0 years of age and recruited from outpatient clinics at the VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System (VAGLAHS) and through local board and care facilities. Patients were clinically stable, medicated, and received the Structural Clinical Interview for DSV-IV Axis I Disorders (SCID-I) to confirm diagnosis of schizophrenia. Exclusion criteria for patients were: (1) substance abuse or dependence in the last 6 months, (2) mental retardation, (3) history of loss of consciousness > 1 hour, (4) identifiable neurological disorder, and (5) not sufficiently fluent in English to comprehend instructions. We assessed clinical symptoms using the expanded Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and examined the BPRS total score, as well as BPRS mean subscores for positive symptoms (thinking disturbance factor), negative symptoms (withdrawal-retardation factor), and depression/ anxiety . Normal control participants were recruited through flyers posted in the local community, newspaper advertisements, and website postings. Exclusion criteria for control participants were: (1) history of schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, bipolar disorder, recurrent depression, history of substance dependence, or any substance abuse in the last 6 months based on the SCID, (2) avoidant, paranoid, schizoid, or schizotypal personality disorders based on the SCID-II, (3) schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder in a first-degree relative, (4) significant neurological disorder or head injury, and (5) not sufficiently fluent in English to comprehend instructions. Efforts were made to group match controls and patients based on sex, age, and parental education. SCID and BPRS interviewers were thoroughly trained to a minimum kappa of 0.75 through the Treatment Unit of the Desert Pacific Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center, and participated in continuous quality assurance procedures. Participants were evaluated for the capacity to give informed consent and provided written informed consent after all procedures were fully explained, according to procedures approved by the institutional review boards at UCLA and VAGLAHS. Procedure Stimuli–We selected 156 different personality-trait adjectives from a validated list . Six lists of 26 adjectives were constructed for the self-referential memory task. Within each of the 6 lists, half of the words were positive (i.e. high desirability) and half were negative (i.e. low desirability). The average number of letters and syllables per word was comparable between valences and across the six lists. Self-referential memory task–The self-referential memory task consisted of two phases: encoding and recognition. The encoding phase included trials drawn from three separate conditions: structural, social desirability, and self-referential. In the structural processing condition, participants judged whether the letters of the word were presented in uppercase or lowercase. In the social desirability condition, participants judged whether the trait was socially desirable for other people in general.
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