Context: Working memory impairments are a central neurocognitive feature of schizophrenia. The nature of these impairments early in the course of illness and the impact of antipsychotic drug treatment on these deficits are not well understood. The oculomotor delayed response task is a translational spatial working memory paradigm used to characterize the neurophysiologic and neurochemical aspects of working memory in the primate brain.
Objective: To examine oculomotor delayed response task performance in patients with first-episode schizophrenia before and after antipsychotic drug treatment.
Design, Setting, And Participants: Twenty-five antipsychotic drug-naive, acutely ill patients with first-episode schizophrenia performed an oculomotor delayed response task at baseline before any drug treatment and again after 6 weeks of risperidone treatment. Twenty-five matched healthy controls were studied in parallel.
Main Outcome Measure: Accuracy for remembered spatial locations on an oculomotor delayed response task.
Results: Before treatment, patients demonstrated baseline impairment in the ability to maintain spatial location information in working memory at longer delay-period durations (8 seconds), when maintenance demands on working memory were greatest. After 6 weeks of risperidone treatment and significant clinical improvement, this pretreatment impairment worsened such that patients were uniformly impaired across all delay period durations (1-8 seconds). This occurred in the absence of any generalized adverse effect on oculomotor systems or significant extrapyramidal adverse effects.
Conclusions: Deficits in the maintenance of spatial information in working memory are present early in the course of illness. Risperidone treatment exacerbated these deficits, perhaps by impairing the encoding of information into working memory. Studies with nonhuman primates performing oculomotor delayed response tasks suggest that the apparent adverse effect of risperidone might result from treatment-related changes in modulatory functions of prefrontal D1 receptor systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.63.11.1189 | DOI Listing |
Dev Cogn Neurosci
December 2024
Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, UCL, London WC1H 0AP, UK. Electronic address:
Executive functions can be classified into processes of inhibition, working memory and shifting, which together support flexible and goal-directed behaviour and are crucial for both current and later-life outcomes. A large body of literature has identified distinct brain regions critical to performing each of these functions. These findings are however predicated on a piecemeal and single-task approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Exp Child Psychol
January 2025
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, LMU University Hospital, LMU Munich, 80336 München, Germany.
Early spelling depends on the ability to understand the alphabetic principle and to translate speech sounds into visual symbols (letters). Thus, the ability to associate sound-symbol pairs might be an important predictor of spelling development. Here, we examined the relation between sound-symbol learning (SSL) and early spelling skills.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Neuropsychol
January 2025
Department of Psychological Sciences, Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA.
Many aspects of human performance require producing sequences of items in serial order. The current study takes a multiple-case approach to investigate whether the system responsible for serial order is shared across cognitive domains, focusing on working memory (WM) and word production. Serial order performance in three individuals with post-stroke language and verbal WM disorders (hereafter persons with aphasia, PWAs) were assessed using recognition and recall tasks for verbal and visuospatial WM, as well as error analyses in spoken and written production tasks to assess whether there was a tendency to produce the correct phonemes/letters in the wrong order.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Our cognitive capacities like working memory and attention are known to systematically vary over time with our physical activity levels, dietary choices, and sleep patterns. However, whether our metacognitive capacities--such as our strategic use and optimization of cognitive resources--show a similar relationship with these key lifestyle factors remains unknown. Here we addressed this question in healthy young adults by examining if physical activity, diet, and sleep patterns were predictive of self-reported metacognitive status.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Exp Psychol
January 2025
Department of Psychology, University at Buffalo.
Working memory is associated with general intelligence and is crucial for performing complex cognitive tasks. Neuroimaging investigations have recognized that working memory is supported by a distribution of activity in regions across the entire brain. Identification of these regions has come primarily from general linear model analyses of statistical parametric maps to reveal brain regions whose activation is linearly related to working memory task conditions.
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