Miscomprehension of nonliteral ("figurative") language like metaphors, proverbs, idioms, and ironic expressions by patients with schizophrenia is a phenomenon mentioned already in historical psychiatric descriptions. However, it was only recently that studies did differentiate between novel and conventional metaphors, a factor that is known to influence the difficulty of comprehension in healthy subjects. Further, familiarity with stimuli is an important factor for comprehension, which was not recommended in utmost previous studies. In this study, 23 patients with DSM IV schizophrenia and 19 healthy control subjects performed a newly-developed German metaphor comprehension test with three types of stimuli: novel metaphors, conventional German metaphors, and meaningless statements. During the test procedure, participants indicated familiarity with the stimulus and then matched the meaning with one out of four given alternatives. Familiarity rankings did not significantly differ between patients and control subjects. However, on descriptive level, there was a tendency for healthy controls to be more familiar with conventional metaphors than schizophrenic patients. Further, comprehension of conventional and novel metaphors differed significantly between the groups, with higher performance in healthy controls. Considering only those metaphors that had been ranked as familiar, patients only revealed significant lower performance opposed to controls regarding novel metaphors, while they did not differ in conventional metaphors. Taken together, the results indicate that patients with schizophrenia might show an altered way of comprehension in novel metaphors, leading to more misunderstandings. However, their previously reported impairments in conventional metaphors might rather be due to a lack of familiarity with the stimuli-making conventional metaphors to novel metaphors in the individual case.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.02251 | DOI Listing |
Heliyon
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Health Management and Economics Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran.
Gastric cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality among men and the second leading cause among women in Iran. Given the high incidence and mortality rates of this disease in the country, a deeper investigation into its effective causes is essential. One effective approach to uncovering the unknowns related to gastric cancer is the application of critical-deconstructive future-thinking tools, particularly Causal Layer Analysis (CLA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQual Res Med Healthc
July 2024
Department of Interdisciplinary Health Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo.
Autism Res
November 2024
Department of Speech and Language Therapy, University of Peloponnese, Kalamata, Greece.
Research in the field of figurative language processing in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) has demonstrated that autistic individuals experience systematic difficulties in the comprehension of different types of metaphors. However, there is scarce evidence regarding metaphor production skills in ASD. Importantly, the exact source of metaphor processing difficulties in ASD remains largely controversial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Natl Cancer Cent
December 2023
Key Laboratory of Novel Targets and Drug Study for Neural Repair of Zhejiang Province, School of Medicine, Hangzhou City University, Hangzhou, China.
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) stands as a profoundly heterogeneous and aggressive malignancy, manifesting a discouragingly limited response to conventional therapeutic interventions. Within the intricate tapestry of the tumor microenvironment (TME), cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) emerge as pivotal constituents, wielding the capacity to propel the malignant attributes of neoplastic cells while bolstering their deftness in thwarting treatments. The rapid evolution of nanomedicinal technologies ushers in fresh avenues for therapeutic paradigms meticulously honed to target CAFs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
June 2024
Center for Psychology and Cognitive Science, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Psycholinguistic models of metaphor processing remain a subject of debate. A prime-probe design using Chinese materials with a specific time span (300 ms) was applied to test the mechanisms of metaphor processing. Conventional and familiarized metaphors were designed as primes, followed by a probe word semantically related to the prime metaphor (MT), a probe word related to the literal meaning of the final word of the prime metaphor (LT), control/unrelated probe word (UT), or non-word.
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