AI Article Synopsis

  • Schizophrenia and schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) are connected on a mental illness spectrum, with research indicating they share similar underlying causes.
  • A study analyzed 116 participants, measuring their neural responses during a task to find correlations between their brain activity (PMBR) and scores on a schizotypal personality questionnaire.
  • Results showed a significant negative relationship between PMBR and schizotypal symptoms, especially in areas related to interpersonal and disorganized aspects, suggesting a continuum of neural deficits from healthy individuals to those with schizophrenia.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Schizophrenia and schizotypal personality disorder (SPD) lie on a single spectrum of mental illness and converging evidence suggests similarities in the etiology of the 2 conditions. However, schizotypy is a heterogeneous facet of personality in the healthy population and so may be seen as a bridge between health and mental illness. Neural evidence for such a continuity would have implications for the characterization and treatment of schizophrenia. Based on our previous work identifying a relationship between symptomology in schizophrenia and abnormal movement-induced electrophysiological response (the post-movement beta rebound [PMBR]), we predicted that if subclinical schizotypy arises from similar neural mechanisms to schizophrenia, schizotypy in healthy individuals would be associated with reduced PMBR.

Methods: One-hundred sixteen participants completed a visuomotor task while their neural activity was recorded by magnetoencephalography. Partial correlations were computed between a measure of PMBR extracted from left primary motor cortex and scores on the Schizotypal Personality Questionnaire (SPQ), a self-report measure of schizotypal personality. Correlations between PMBR and SPQ factor scores measuring cognitive-perceptual, interpersonal and disorganization dimensions of schizotypy were also computed. Effects of site, age, and sex were controlled for.

Results: We found a significant negative correlation between total SPQ score and PMBR. This was most strongly mediated by variance shared between interpersonal and disorganization factor scores.

Conclusion: These findings indicate a continuum of neural deficit between schizotypy and schizophrenia, with diminution of PMBR, previously reported in schizophrenia, also measurable in individuals with schizotypal features, particularly disorganization and impaired interpersonal relations.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6581139PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby117DOI Listing

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