Abstract
A recent study observed lateralized deficit in the disengagement of covert visual attention in schizophrenic patients. Subsequent attempts to replicate this finding have had mixed results. Differences in the neuroleptic treatment or other secondary factors associated with schizophrenia are some of the possible reasons for these inconsistent findings. In this study, we examined the ability to shift covert visual attention in neuroleptic-naive, schizophrenia spectrum personality disordered (SSPD; n = 35) subjects and normal controls ( n = 34) under a variety of spatial cuing and alerting conditions. We hypothesized that SSPD subjects would have difficulty with disengagement of covert visual attention from an invalidly cued left visual field when the target appeared in the right visual field in comparison to the normal subjects. As predicted, schizophrenia spectrum personality disordered subjects had significantly longer latencies for the right visual field invalid targets than normals ( p = .014). Under the remaining cue conditions, spectrum subjects performed normally. Consequently, the cost of left visual field invalid cueing for the right visual field target was significantly higher in spectrum personality subjects than in normals. The cost for the invalid right visual field cue and the benefits of valid cue in both fields were very similar in the two groups. The findings of an asymmetrical deficit in the disengagement and shift of covert visual attention in schizophrenia spectrum subjects are similar to the one's observed in patients with unilateral left hemisphere lesions.
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