Abstract

Cognitive deficits in people with schizophrenia are among the hardest to treat and strongly predict functional outcome. The ability to maintain sensory precepts in memory over a short delay is impacted early in the progression of schizophrenia and has been linked to reliable neurophysiological markers. Yet, little is known about the mechanisms of these deficits. Here, we investigated possible neurophysiological mechanisms of impaired visual short-term memory (vSTM, aka working memory maintenance) in the first-episode schizophrenia spectrum (FESz) using magnetoencephalography (MEG). Twenty-eight FESz and 25 matched controls performed a lateralized change detection task where they were cued to selectively attend and remember colors of circles presented in either the left or right peripheral visual field over a 1 s delay. Contralateral alpha suppression (CAS) during the delay period was used to assess selective attention to cued visual hemifields held in vSTM. Delay-period CAS was compared between FESz and controls and between trials presenting one vs three items per visual hemifield. CAS in dorsal visual cortex was reduced in FESz compared to controls in high-load trials, but not low-load trials. Group differences in CAS were found beginning 100 ms after the disappearance of the memory set, suggesting deficits were not due to the initial deployment of attention to the cued visual hemifield prior to stimulus presentation. CAS was not greater for high-load vs low-load trials in FESz subjects, although this effect was prominent in controls. Further, lateralized gamma (34–40 Hz) power emerged in dorsal visual cortex prior to the onset of CAS in controls but not FESz. Gamma power in this cluster differed between groups at both high and low load. CAS deficits observed in FESz were correlated with change detection accuracy, working memory function, estimated IQ, and negative symptoms. Our results implicate deficits in CAS in trials requiring broad, but not narrow, focus of attention to spatially distributed objects maintained in vSTM in FESz, possibly due to reduced ability to broadly distribute visuospatial attention (alpha) or disruption of object-location binding (gamma) during encoding/consolidation. This early pathophysiology may shed light upon mechanisms of emerging working memory deficits that are intrinsic to schizophrenia.

Highlights

  • People with schizophrenia have reduced capacity to maintain visual information in the focus of attention and working memory over short periods of time [1, 2]

  • Many others assert that attention cannot sufficiently explain all working memory phenomena observed and a separate system is needed for working memory, but still acknowledge the role of attention in controlling the processes of working memory [60, 61]

  • We examined the effects of schizophrenia on attentional control during working memory maintenance by investigating Contralateral alpha suppression (CAS), a robust and objective neurophysiological marker of the focus of attention

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Summary

Introduction

People with schizophrenia have reduced capacity to maintain visual information in the focus of attention and working memory over short periods of time [1, 2]. People with schizophrenia show reduced activity during the delay between encoding and retrieval in frontal [11, 12] and parieto-occipital cortical areas [13, 14] when multiple items are held in vSTM. The mechanism of these impairments, remains unclear. VSTM impairments in schizophrenia likely occur early in maintenance, possibly during consolidation of the percept

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