Abstract

Abnormalities of auditory information processing represent a core feature of schizophrenic psychopathology. Event-related potentials (ERP) provide an objective index of the information processing deficits associated with schizophrenia and a tool for investigation of the underlying pathophysiology. The best established abnormality is a decrease in the amplitude of auditory P300. In an “oddball” paradigm, P300 is preceded by a series of earlier, negative-polarity ERP components that index discrete, prior information-processing events. The earliest such component, mismatch negativity (MMN), is elicited whenever a deviant, “oddball” stimulus interrupts a sequence of repetitive standard stimuli. MMN is generated principally within primary auditory cortex or adjacent structures on the superior temporal plane, suggesting that it indexes the earliest cortical event in the cognitive processing of auditory information. In the present study, MMN was studied in a group of 14 chronic schizophrenic subjects relative to 12 age- and IQ-matched normal controls in a passive auditory oddball paradigm in order to test the hypothesis that auditory information processing is impaired in schizophrenia, even at the level of primary sensory cortex. Schizophrenic subjects showed a significant reduction in MMN amplitude relative to controls, with a trend toward a greater deficit on the left than the right side. The finding of impaired MMN generation in schizophrenia suggests that information processing is impaired even at the level of auditory cortex and that the pathophysiological processes underlying information processing dysfunction in schizophrenia are widespread throughout the cortex, rather than limited to high-order association cortex such as prefrontal or mesial temporal cortex.

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