Abstract

Current research on perceptual organization in schizophrenia frequently employs shapes with regularly sampled contours (fragmented stimuli), in noise fields composed of similar elements, to elicit visual abnormalities. However, perceptual organization is multi-factorial and, in earlier studies, continuous contours have also been employed in tasks assessing the ability to extract shapes from a background. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of studies using closed-contour stimuli, including the Embedded Figures Test (EFT) and related tasks, both in people with schizophrenia and in healthy schizotypes and relatives, considered at increased risk for psychosis. Eleven studies met the selection criteria for inclusion in the meta-analysis, including six that used a between-groups study design (i.e., perceptual organization abilities of schizophrenia/high-risk groups were compared to healthy or clinical controls), and five that treated schizophrenia symptoms or schizotypy traits and indices of perceptual organization as continuous variables. Effect sizes and heterogeneity statistics were calculated, and the risk of publication bias was explored. A significant, moderate effect for EFT performance was found with studies that compared performance of schizophrenia/high-risk groups to a healthy or patient comparison group (d = −0.523, p < 0.001). However, significant heterogeneity was also found amongst the schizotypy, but not schizophrenia studies, as well as studies using accuracy, but not reaction time as a measure of performance. A non-significant correlation was found for the studies that examined schizophrenia symptoms or schizotypy traits as continuous variables (r = 0.012, p = 0.825). These results suggest that deficits in perceptual organization of non-fragmented stimuli are found when differences between schizophrenia/high-risk groups and comparison groups are maximized. These findings should motivate further investigation of perceptual organization abilities with closed-contour stimuli both in schizophrenia and high-risk groups, which is pertinent to current initiatives to improve the assessment and treatment of cognition in schizophrenia.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is a severe psychotic illness, characterized by symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions, disorganized thoughts and behavior, negative symptoms and social/occupational dysfunction, that have a significant cost on both the person living with psychosis and society (Whiteford et al, 2013; Ettinger et al, 2014)

  • Our goal was to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis to investigate whether perceptual organization difficulties were evident for the closed-contour stimuli of the Embedded Figures Test (EFT), Group Embedded Figures Test (GEFT), Closure Flexibility test (CFT), and HFT in schizophrenia, schizotypy and other high-risk groups

  • The data from 476 participants were treated as discrete and the data from 366 participants were treated as continuous variables

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a severe psychotic illness, characterized by symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions, disorganized thoughts and behavior, negative symptoms (such as social anhedonia) and social/occupational dysfunction, that have a significant cost on both the person living with psychosis and society (Whiteford et al, 2013; Ettinger et al, 2014). A variety of groups, including those with clinical or familial risk, have been investigated to better understand the developmental trajectory toward psychosis, given that the majority of individuals considered “at risk” do not go on to develop schizophrenia (Debbane and Barrantes-Vidal, 2014). Schizotypal personality represents a cluster of personality traits found in healthy individuals in the general community, including unusual perceptual experiences and magical thinking, odd speech or behavior and social withdrawal. These characteristics appear to be similar to, though milder than, the symptoms of schizophrenia and are considered to provide a useful index of risk for psychosis (Kwapil and Barrantes-Vidal, 2014; Mason and Claridge, 2015). Understanding the similarities and differences between high levels of schizotypy and schizophrenia may allow us to decipher the potential risk and protective factors that can lead to illness progression

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