Abstract

Introduction. Neuropsychological functioning connects neuropathology and symptoms in schizophrenia. Previous work suggests that deficient initiation and inhibition underlie the psychomotor poverty and disorganisation syndromes, respectively. Furthermore, although the syndromes are associated with impairments in everyday functioning, cognitive competency (CC; cognitive skills for independent living) has been neglected as an outcome. This study tested a three-level model of schizophrenia pathology (Neuropsychological dysfunction → Syndromes → CC), using unstructured neuropsychological tasks to measure initiation and inhibition. Methods. Participants were 40 adults with schizophrenia. A verbal picture description and the Tinkertoy test yielded initiation and inhibition measures with good interrater reliability. Symptoms were rated using the SANS and SAPS, and an insight scale was administered. The Cognitive Competency Test utilised simulated situations to assess CC. Results. Initiation failed to predict psychomotor poverty, but affected CC directly. Only one indicator of disinhibition (intermingling of personal material into speech) predicted disorganisation, which, through mediation, led to CC deficits. Insight correlated with disorganisation and contributed to CC. Unique effects of initiation, disorganisation, and insight, combined, explained 58% of CC variance. Conclusions. Partial support for the three-level model was obtained. Specific neuropsychological abilities and symptoms explain a substantial proportion of the variance in cognitive competency.

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