4.6 Article

When Top-Down Meets Bottom-Up: Auditory Training Enhances Verbal Memory in Schizophrenia

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
Volume 35, Issue 6, Pages 1132-1141

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbp068

Keywords

schizophrenia; cognition; cognitive training; psychophysiology

Categories

Funding

  1. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression
  2. National Institute of Mental Health [RO1 MH068725-01A1]
  3. San Francisco Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, CA
  4. National Institutes or Health/National Center for Research Resources University of California San Francisco Center for Clinical and Translational Science [UL1 RR024131]

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A critical research priority for our field is to develop treatments that enhance cognitive functioning in schizophrenia and thereby attenuate the functional losses associated with the illness. In this article, we describe such a treatment method that is grounded in emerging research on the widespread sensory processing impairments of schizophrenia, as described elsewhere in this special issue. We first present the rationale for this treatment approach, which consists of cognitive training exercises that make use of principles derived from the past 2 decades of basic science research in learning-induced neuroplasticity; these exercises explicitly target not only the higher order or top-down processes of cognition but also the content building blocks of accurate and efficient sensory representations to simultaneously achieve bottom-up remediation. We then summarize our experience to date and briefly review our behavioral and serum biomarker findings from a randomized controlled trial of this method in outpatients with long-term symptoms of schizophrenia. Finally, we present promising early psychophysiological evidence that supports the hypothesis that this cognitive training method induces changes in aspects of impaired bottom-up sensory processing in schizophrenia. We conclude with the observation that neuroplasticity-based cognitive training brings patients closer to physiological patterns seen in healthy participants, suggesting that it changes the brain in an adaptive manner in schizophrenia.

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