Abstract

We sought to validate the psychometric properties of a recently developed paradigm that aims to measure salience attribution processes proposed to contribute to positive psychotic symptoms, the Salience Attribution Test (SAT). The “aberrant salience” measure from the SAT showed good face validity in previous results, with elevated scores both in high-schizotypy individuals, and in patients with schizophrenia suffering from delusions. Exploring the construct validity of salience attribution variables derived from the SAT is important, since other factors, including latent inhibition/learned irrelevance (LIrr), attention, probabilistic reward learning, sensitivity to probability, general cognitive ability and working memory could influence these measures. Fifty healthy participants completed schizotypy scales, the SAT, a LIrr task, and a number of other cognitive tasks tapping into potentially confounding processes. Behavioural measures of interest from each task were entered into a principal components analysis, which yielded a five-factor structure accounting for ∼75% of the variance in behaviour. Implicit aberrant salience was found to load onto its own factor, which was associated with elevated “Introvertive Anhedonia” schizotypy, replicating our previous finding. LIrr loaded onto a separate factor, which also included implicit adaptive salience, but was not associated with schizotypy. Explicit adaptive and aberrant salience, along with a measure of probabilistic learning, loaded onto a further factor, though this also did not correlate with schizotypy. These results suggest that the measures of LIrr and implicit adaptive salience might be based on similar underlying processes, which are dissociable both from implicit aberrant salience and explicit measures of salience.

Highlights

  • Salience can broadly be defined as “a process whereby objects and representations... [are] attention-grabbing and capture thought and behaviour”(Jensen and Kapur, 2009, p.197)

  • It is possible that dopaminergic transmission, which is abnormal in schizophrenia (Laruelle and Abi-Dargham, 1999), plays a crucial role in salience processing generally (Horvitz, 2000), though the evidence is strongest in the domain of motivational salience (Berridge and Robinson, 1998)

  • A significant learned irrelevance effect was present on the LIrr (mean reaction times: R = 393.00 ms (SD = 47.87); PE = 377.35 ms (SD = 51.27); and NPE = 353.49 ms (SD = 61.83); Cohen’s d = 0.50)

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Summary

Introduction

Salience can broadly be defined as “a process whereby objects and representations... [are] attention-grabbing and capture thought and behaviour”(Jensen and Kapur, 2009, p.197). Kapur (2003), in an elegant attempt to create a framework explaining the symptoms and neurobiology of psychosisin-schizophrenia, suggested that stochastic firing of dopamine neurons (Seeman and Kapur, 2000) leads to the “aberrant” attribution of salience via context-independent stimulus-reinforcement signalling (Berridge and Robinson, 1998). Patients with psychosis have shown impairments on tests of reinforcement learning, on measures that assess adaptive responses to rewards (Waltz and Gold, 2007; Gold et al, 2008; Heerey et al, 2008; Waltz et al, 2009). Several findings of altered haemodynamic response patterns in patients with psychosis relative to healthy controls during reward processing have provided evidence for the dysfunction of brain circuits innervated by dopamine (Jensen et al, 2008; Murray et al, 2008b)

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