4.4 Article

Attentional engagement and inhibitory control according to positive and negative symptoms in schizophrenia: An emotional antisaccade task

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH
Volume 239, Issue -, Pages 142-150

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2021.11.044

Keywords

Attentional biases; Psychosis; Eye-tracker; Cognition; Emotion; Eye-movements

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This study examined the cognitive processing of emotional faces in schizophrenia patients and found that patients with positive symptoms showed a lack of attentional engagement and impaired inhibitory control to threatening information, while patients with negative symptoms had an emotional advantage for faces but overall lack of attentional engagement. These findings have important implications for understanding the psychological mechanisms of schizophrenia and improving treatment strategies.
Despite schizophrenia (SZ) is characterized by a high psychopathological heterogeneity, the underlying psychological mechanisms that result in different clinical profiles are unclear. This study examined the cognitive processing of emotional faces (angry, happy, neutral, and sad) by means of assessing inhibitory control (antisaccade task) and attentional engagement (prosaccade task) with the eye-tracking paradigm. Firstly, two clinical SZ subgroups classified according to the predominance of positive (PSZ; n = 20) or negative symptoms (NSZ; n = 34) and a control group of 32 individuals were compared. Secondly, the association between prosaccade and antisaccade measurements and the severity of positive and negative symptoms were analyzed. The PSZ group showed slower antisaccades when angry faces were displayed, and higher positive symptoms were associated with slower prosaccade latencies to ones. Conversely, the NSZ group made overall slower prosaccades with an emotional advantage for angry faces, and higher negative symptoms were associated with faster antisaccade latencies to ones. Hence, whereas positive SZ profile is related to a lack of attentional engagement and an impaired inhibitory control to threatening information; negative SZ profile is linked to a lack of attentional engagement to faces, mainly with non-threat ones, and with an advantage to ignore distracting threatening stimuli. These findings support affective information-processing theories suggesting a hypersensitivity to threat for positive SZ profiles, and a desensitization to socio-emotional information for negative ones. Consequently, characterizing psychological mechanisms of SZ may allow improving current treatments to threat management when positive symptoms are predominant, or emotion sensitization when negative symptoms prevail.

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