6533b826fe1ef96bd12846ac
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The effect of associative strength on semantic priming in schizophrenia
Pilar TomásMaría José SolerCarmen DasíJuan Carlos RuizInma Fuentessubject
AdultMaleLexical decisionWord processingContext (language use)behavioral disciplines and activities03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSemantic similarityMemoryRepetition PrimingReaction TimemedicineLexical decision taskHumansSemantic memoryAssociative strength effectBiological PsychiatryMemory DisordersThought disorderAssociation Learningmedicine.diseaseSemantics030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthSchizophreniaCase-Control StudiesSchizophreniaFemaleSchizophrenic Psychologymedicine.symptomSemantic memoryPsychologyPriming (psychology)030217 neurology & neurosurgerySemantic primingCognitive psychologydescription
The present research was designed to investigate the pattern of semantic priming in schizophrenia as a function of strength of association (or semantic distance between concepts in the semantic network). Thirty schizophrenia patients, without formal thought disorder, and twenty-nine healthy controls participated in a lexical decision task in which prime-target associative strength (strong, weak and not related) and stimulus-onset asynchrony (SOA: 250 ms and 750 ms) were manipulated. Patients and controls showed the same associative strength effect on RTs. In the short SOA condition priming effects were obtained for both strong and weak prime-target associative conditions. However in the long SOA priming was only significant for strongly associated pairs. This pattern of priming effects was similar in both groups, with higher priming on the short SOA and strong association conditions. Altogether results suggest that automatic semantic spreading activation is unimpaired in schizophrenia patients without formal thought disorder. These results are in line with the general evidence of impaired implicit priming observed only in patients with formal thought disorder. At the same time patients use context as controls to facilitate word processing. Finally, these findings evidence that, prime-target associative strength could moderate results in studies of semantic memory deficits in schizophrenia.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-01-18 |