Abstract
Schizophrenia has long been associated with dysfunction in visual perception. One important region underlying this is lateral occipital cortex (LOC), a mid-level visual region critical for object recognition. Although LOC of patients has exhibited structural and functional abnormalities in MR brain imaging studies, how it interacts with other networks over time under rest and with task demands remains to be clarified. The present study investigated the spatial-temporal interaction of LOC with other brain networks by examining functional connectivity communities of the brain over time. We found increased temporal instability of LOC connectivity over time under both resting and task-switching conditions in patients. In the resting state, LOC of patients had increased interaction with the frontoparietal task-control network (FPTC) and thalamus compared with controls, while during task switching, LOC showed increased interaction with the default mode network (DMN). Temporal instability of LOC connectivity was positively correlated with patients' switching cost during task performance and with hallucination severity. These results indicate that reduced stability of LOC connectivity may be an important factor underlying neurocognitive dysfunctions and symptom severity in schizophrenia.
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