Abstract

While the literature regarding the existence of difficulties in inhibition in schizophrenia is relatively consistent, it is not clear whether these difficulties reflect any specific deficit in an inhibitory control process or whether they are the result of deficits in the systems that regulate inhibitory control, such as attentional resources. This also raises the issue of attentional resources in schizophrenia, which offers a somewhat puzzling and sometimes contradictory picture. In this study, these issues were investigated by means of a paradigm in which the need for inhibitory control and the need for correct allocation of attentional resources varied parametrically. Twenty-six outpatients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and 26 matched controls completed a visual search task during which distractors were presented and had to be inhibited. At the same time, they also completed an auditory target detection task of varying difficulty. The results show that the patients had difficulties both in inhibiting distractors and in correctly allocating attention to the two tasks. The results also show that these two difficulties were not related. This leads to the conclusion that schizophrenia involves both defective inhibitory control and faulty management of attentional resources, and that the former does not result from the latter. Furthermore, these effects seem to be neither dependent on processing speed, nor related to medication.

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