Reasoning anomalies associated with delusions in schizophrenia.

Schizophr Bull

Macquarie Centre for Cognitive Science, Macquarie University, NSW, Australia.

Published: March 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Deluded individuals show specific reasoning anomalies, such as jumping to conclusions and externalizing biases, compared to healthy controls.
  • Both probabilistic reasoning and theory-of-mind (ToM) tasks correlate with a general tendency towards delusional thinking, while attributional biases are distinct and function independently.
  • The findings suggest a shared underlying mechanism in schizophrenia may impair the ability to properly assess perceived reality, impacting social communication and contributing to the formation of delusions.

Article Abstract

Deluded people differ from nondeluded controls on attributional style questionnaires and probabilistic-reasoning and theory-of-mind (ToM) tasks. No study to date has examined the relations between these 3 reasoning anomalies in the same individuals so as to evaluate their functional independence and potentially inform theories of delusion formation. We did so in 35 schizophrenic patients with a history of delusions, 30 of whom were currently deluded, and 34 healthy controls. Compared with healthy controls, patients showed (a) a jumping-to-conclusions bias and a bias to overadjust when confronted with a change of evidence on probabilistic-reasoning tasks, (b) an excessive externalizing attributional bias, and (c) performance deficits on 3 ToM tasks. Probabilistic-reasoning and ToM measures correlated, while attributional-bias scores were independent of other task measures. A general proneness to delusional ideation correlated with probabilistic-reasoning and ToM measures, while externalizing bias was unrelated to the study measures of delusional ideation. Personalizing bias associated specifically with paranoia across the clinical and nonclinical participants. Findings are consistent with a common underlying mechanism in schizophrenia which contributes to the anomalies on probabilistic-reasoning and ToM tasks associated with delusions. We speculate that this mechanism is impairment of the normal capacity to inhibit "perceived reality" (the evidence of our senses), a capacity that evolved as part of the "social brain" to facilitate intersubjective communication within a shared reality.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2833109PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbn069DOI Listing

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