Schizophrenia Bulletin

Intact Serial Dependence in Schizophrenia: Evidence from an Orientation Adjustment Task

David Pascucci 1
Maya Roinishvili 2
Eka Chkonia 3
Andreas Brand 1
DAVID A. WHITNEY 4, 5, 6
Michael H. Herzog 1
Mauro Manassi 7
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-06-27
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR2.249
CiteScore11.4
Impact factor5.3
ISSN05867614, 17451701, 17451707
Abstract
Background and Hypothesis

For a long time, it was proposed that schizophrenia (SCZ) patients rely more on sensory input and less on prior information, potentially leading to reduced serial dependence—ie, a reduced influence of prior stimuli in perceptual tasks. However, existing evidence is constrained to a few paradigms, and whether reduced serial dependence reflects a general characteristic of the disease remains unclear.

Study Design

We investigated serial dependence in 26 SCZ patients and 27 healthy controls (CNT) to evaluate the influence of prior stimuli in a classic visual orientation adjustment task, a paradigm not previously tested in this context.

Study Results

As expected, the CNT group exhibited clear serial dependence, with systematic biases toward the orientation of stimuli shown in the preceding trials. Serial dependence in SCZ patients was largely comparable to that in the CNT group.

Conclusions

These findings challenge the prevailing notion of reduced serial dependence in SCZ, suggesting that observed differences between healthy CNT and patients may depend on aspects of perceptual or cognitive processing that are currently not understood.

Found 
Found 

Top-30

Journals

1
1

Publishers

1
1
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated only for publications connected to researchers, organizations and labs registered on the platform.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex
Found error?