Abstract

In its initial formulation, the concept of basic symptoms (BSs) integrated findings on the early symptomatic course of schizophrenia and first in vivo evidence of accompanying brain aberrations. It argued that the subtle subclinical disturbances in mental processes described as BSs were the most direct self-experienced expression of the underlying neurobiological aberrations of the disease. Other characteristic symptoms of psychosis (e.g., delusions and hallucinations) were conceptualized as secondary phenomena, resulting from dysfunctional beliefs and suboptimal coping styles with emerging BSs and/or concomitant stressors. While BSs can occur in many mental disorders, in particular affective disorders, a subset of perceptive and cognitive BSs appear to be specific to psychosis and are currently employed in two alternative risk criteria. However, despite their clinical recognition in the early detection of psychosis, neurobiological research on the aetiopathology of psychosis with neuroimaging methods has only just begun to consider the neural correlate of BSs. This perspective paper reviews the emerging evidence of an association between BSs and aberrant brain activation, connectivity patterns, and metabolism, and outlines promising routes for the use of BSs in aetiopathological research on psychosis.

Highlights

  • Over the past two decades, preventive research in psychosis has renewed interest in subjective and subclinical psychopathology beyond positive and negative symptoms

  • The Cognitive-perceptive basic symptoms (COPER) group showed a significant lower amplitude at a left temporoparietal site, whereas the attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS)/brief limited intermittent psychotic symptoms (BLIPS) group elicited smaller amplitudes at midline and left hemispheric electrode sites. These findings suggest potential differences in event-related potentials (ERP) between BSsdefined and APS-defined clinical high risk (CHR) patients that might be related to different states of disturbed information processing

  • Despite the fact that basic symptoms” (BSs) were in their original formulation considered to be a direct manifestation of brain abnormalities in patients with schizophrenia, the nature of such abnormalities appear subtle and heterogeneous, requiring sophisticated methods of analyses to be detected

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Over the past two decades, preventive research in psychosis has renewed interest in subjective and subclinical psychopathology beyond positive and negative symptoms. The COPER group showed a significant lower amplitude at a left temporoparietal site, whereas the APS/BLIPS group elicited smaller amplitudes at midline and left hemispheric electrode sites These findings suggest potential differences in ERPs between BSsdefined and APS-defined CHR patients that might be related to different states of disturbed information processing. Beside task-related activity, resting-state neural oscillations have been recently investigated in CHR samples defined by both APS and BSs [31, 32], indicating increased delta/ theta-band activity with reduced alpha-band power [31] and reduced theta-band activity which correlated with neurocognitive impairments [32], respectively. These cellular mechanisms have been shown to be disrupted in schizophrenia [58]

Discussion and conclusion
Findings
DISCUSSION AND PERSPECTIVES
CONCLUSION
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