Do loudness cues contribute to duration mismatch negativity reduction in schizophrenia?
- 1 December 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in NeuroReport
- Vol. 12 (18) , 4069-4073
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001756-200112210-00042
Abstract
The present study explored duration mismatch negativity (MMN) reduction in schizophrenia. Duration MMN studies usually employ tones of very short duration (< 200 ms). For stimuli < 200 ms in duration, an increment in duration is accompanied by an increase in perceived loudness. It was previously proposed that the effectiveness of duration MMN in revealing MMN reduction in schizophrenia might be explained by patients being insensitive to loudness cues and duration increments. In this study we equated loudness cues in a typical duration MMN paradigm and explored the effect of this manipulation on MMN amplitude reduction in schizophrenia. The manipulation had little effect on a healthy comparison group but had a marked effect on the MMN generated in the patient group who produced a significantly smaller MMN response to the regular duration deviant than to that in the equated loudness condition. This result was interpreted as demonstrating that patients exhibit a very marked insensitivity to duration increments.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deficits in Auditory and Visual Context-Dependent Processing in SchizophreniaArchives of General Psychiatry, 2000
- Do perceived loudness cues contribute to duration mismatch negativity (MMN)?NeuroReport, 2000
- Auditory sensory memory in schizophrenia: inadequate trace formation?Psychiatry Research, 2000
- Duration and frequency mismatch negativity in schizophreniaPublished by Elsevier ,2000
- Brain potential evidence for an auditory sensory memory deficit in schizophreniaAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1995
- Mismatch negativity: An index of a preattentive processing deficit in schizophreniaBiological Psychiatry, 1991
- A Polydiagnostic Application of Operational Criteria in Studies of Psychotic IllnessArchives of General Psychiatry, 1991
- The role of attention in auditory information processing as revealed by event-related potentials and other brain measures of cognitive functionBehavioral and Brain Sciences, 1990
- A Solution for Reliable and Valid Reduction of Ocular Artifacts, Applied to the P300 ERPPsychophysiology, 1986
- On short and long auditory stores.Psychological Bulletin, 1984