Loading...

The Post-Imperative Negative Variation in Schizophrenic Patients and Healthy Subjects

by Christoph Klein (Author)
©1997 Thesis 386 Pages

Summary

The Post-Imperative Negative Variation (PINV) is an event-related brain potential that has scarcely been investigated experimentally in schizophrenic patients. Four consecutive experiments using a visual delayed matching-to-sample task show that the PINV (1) is sensitive to the ambiguity in the matching process both in schizophrenic patients and healthy subjects, (2) is sensitive to the provisional memory load in schizophrenic patients only, (3) is related to the experimentally induced motor response, and (4) has a frontolateral topography that distinguishes schizophrenic patients and schizotypal subjects from healthy controls. Taken together, these results suggest that the prefrontal cortex or those cerebral structures functionally linked with it contribute to the rising of the PINV in schizophrenic patients.

Details

Pages
386
Year
1997
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631310786
Language
English
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1997. 386 pp., num. fig. and tab.

Biographical notes

Christoph Klein (Author)

The Author: Christoph Klein studied Psychology, Biology, and Philosophy at the Universities of Bonn and Hamburg. After receiving his diploma in Psychology in 1991 he worked as a research assistant in the laboratories of B. Rockstroh and R. Cohen at the University of Konstanz, completing his Ph.D. in 1995. Since 1994 he has been assistent professor in the Psychophysiology Research Group of J. Fahrenberg at the University of Freiburg. For the experiment described in chapter 5 the author was awarded with the «Tursky Award» of the Society for Psychophysiological Research in 1993. Christoph Klein received the Dissertation Award of the «Stiftung für Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft an der Universität Konstanz» in 1996.

Previous

Title: The Post-Imperative Negative Variation in Schizophrenic Patients and Healthy Subjects