LOOSE ASSOCIATIONS AND DISORDERED SPEECH PATTERNS IN CHRONIC SCHIZOPHRENIA
- 1 February 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease
- Vol. 162 (2) , 105-112
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005053-197602000-00004
Abstract
A method was developed and utilized to evaluate the free speech of chronic schizophrenic patients to measure aspects of thought disorder. Using this technique, 2 samples (1 chronically hospitalized, the other nonhospitalized) of 15 chronic schizophrenic subjects, each were studied and compared. Severe types of looseness of association were not a prominent finding in the patients studied. On several of the other categories of speech patterns investigated, multiyear hospitalized chronic schizophrenics had significantly higher scores than a sample of chronic schizophrenics living in the community. This included a measure of paucity of speech, of perseveration, of repetition, and a measure of overall deviant verbalizations. The chronic schizophrenic patients generally showed high degrees of perseveration and paucity of speech, variables which may be related to impoverished thinking. The significance of these results was analyzed and discussed, with several aspects of the data suggesting that the differences may be due to severity of illness. The phenomenological scoring system developed and utilized was reliable and seemed to present a useful tool for the study of many aspects of the schizophrenic patient.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: