AI Article Synopsis

  • Research suggests that motivation and goal-directed behavior reductions in people with psychosis may be linked to impaired episodic memory.
  • A meta-analysis involving 103 studies and over 13,600 participants found a moderate negative correlation between episodic memory deficits and general negative symptoms of psychosis, particularly amotivation, but also reduced expressivity.
  • While there is evidence supporting this relationship, the small effect size indicates that episodic memory might not be the sole factor influencing amotivation, suggesting future studies should explore other contributing factors.

Article Abstract

Based on findings from cognitive science, it has been theorized that the reductions in motivation and goal-directed behavior in people with psychosis could stem from impaired episodic memory. In the current meta-analysis, we investigated this putative functional link between episodic memory deficits and negative symptoms. We hypothesized that episodic memory deficits in psychosis would be related to negative symptoms in general but would be more strongly related to amotivation than to reduced expressivity. We included 103 eligible studies (13,622 participants) in the analyses. Results revealed significant, moderate negative associations of episodic memory with negative symptoms in general (k = 103; r = -.23; z = -13.40; P ≤ .001; 95% CI [-.26; -.20]), with amotivation (k = 16; r = -.18; z = -6.6; P ≤ .001; 95% CI [-.23; -.13]) and with reduced expressivity (k = 15; r = -.18; z = -3.30; P ≤.001; 95% CI[-.29; -.07]). These associations were not moderated by sociodemographic characteristics, positive symptoms, depression, antipsychotic medication or type of negative symptom scale. Although these findings provide sound evidence for the association between episodic memory deficits and amotivation, the rather small magnitude and the unspecific pattern of this relationship also indicate that episodic memory deficits are unlikely to be the only factor relevant to amotivation. This implicates that future research should investigate episodic memory in conjunction with other factors that could account for the association of episodic memory deficits and amotivation in psychosis.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8886596PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbab120DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

episodic memory
36
memory deficits
20
negative symptoms
16
association episodic
12
episodic
9
memory
9
memory negative
8
people psychosis
8
symptoms general
8
reduced expressivity
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!