Event-Related Gamma Activity in Schizophrenia Patients During a Visual Backward-Masking Task
- 1 December 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in American Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 162 (12) , 2330-2336
- https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.162.12.2330
Abstract
Schizophrenia patients experience deficits in many aspects of cognition and perception. Abnormalities in gamma activity may underlie some of these deficits, including rapid processing of visual stimuli. This study examined event-related gamma range activity during a visual backward-masking task in schizophrenia patients and normal comparison subjects. Event-related gamma activity was recorded in 15 normal comparison subjects and 32 schizophrenia patients. Participants had event-related gamma activity recorded while viewing 60 unmasked visual targets and 240 trials of visual backward masking. Effects of group, accuracy (correct versus incorrect), stimulus-onset asynchrony, and regional activity (left versus right hemisphere, anterior versus posterior regions) were assessed. Schizophrenia patients had significantly reduced gamma activity in relation to comparison subjects during the backward-masking task. Normal comparison subjects showed significantly greater gamma activity in the right hemisphere, whereas schizophrenia patients did not show this pattern of lateralization. For the unmasked target, there was no group effect and no significant interactions in gamma-band responses. These results extend previous findings of abnormal gamma range activity in schizophrenia patients. Patients showed overall less gamma activity and failed to show lateralization of activity to the right hemisphere during masking, but they showed comparable levels of gamma activity to unmasked stimuli. Schizophrenia patients' poorer performance during a masking task may be partly influenced by this abnormal level and the distribution of gamma activity.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Size matters: effects of stimulus size, duration and eccentricity on the visual gamma-band responseClinical Neurophysiology, 2004
- Spatial frequency discrimination in schizophrenia.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 2002
- Neuronal fast oscillations as a target site for psychoactive drugsPharmacology & Therapeutics, 2000
- Gamma-range oscillations in backward-masking functions and their putative neural correlates.Psychological Review, 2000
- Oscillatory gamma activity in humans and its role in object representationTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 1999
- A mechanism for generation of long-range synchronous fast oscillations in the cortexNature, 1996
- Synchronized oscillations in interneuron networks driven by metabotropic glutamate receptor activationNature, 1995
- Hemispheric AsymmetryAnnual Review of Psychology, 1990
- Backward masking as a measure of slow processing in schizophrenia spectrum disorders.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1981
- Implications of sustained and transient channels for theories of visual pattern masking, saccadic suppression, and information processing.Psychological Review, 1976