Abstract

Formal thought disorder (FTD) is clinically manifested as disorganized speech, but there have been only few investigations of its linguistic properties. We examined how disturbance of thought may relate to the referential function of language as expressed in the use of noun phrases (NPs) and the complexity of sentence structures. We used a comic strip description task to elicit language samples from 30 participants with schizophrenia (SZ), 15 with moderate or severe FTD (SZ + FTD), and 15 minimal or no FTD (SZ−FTD), as well as 15 first-degree relatives of people with SZ (FDRs) and 15 neurotypical controls (NC). We predicted that anomalies in the normal referential use of NPs, sub-divided into definite and indefinite NPs, would identify FTD; and also that FTD would also be linked to reduced linguistic complexity as specifically measured by the number of embedded clauses and of grammatical dependents. Participants with SZ + FTD produced more referential anomalies than NC and produced the fewest definite NPs, while FDRs produced the most and thus also differed from NC. When referential anomalies were classed according to the NP type in which they occurred, the SZ + FTD group produced more anomalies in definite NPs than NC. Syntactic errors did not distinguish groups, but the SZ + FTD group exhibited significantly less syntactic complexity than non-SZ groups. Exploratory regression analyses suggested that production of definite NPs distinguished the two SZ groups. These results demonstrate that FTD can be identified in specific grammatical patterns which provide new targets for detection, intervention, and neurobiological studies.

Highlights

  • Formal thought disorder (FTD) is clinically manifest primarily as speech that is disorganized and hard to follow, exhibiting loose associations, derailment, tangentiality, or incoherence

  • Language is an inherent aspect of neurotypical cognitive functioning in humans, and FTD remains conceptualized as a problem of ‘thought’, it may involve a decline in aspects of cognition inherently linked to language function

  • Quantitative production of noun phrases (NPs) types The SZ + FTD group had the lowest proportion of definite NPs while first-degree relatives of people with SZ (FDRs) had the highest (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Table 4 for definite NPs/total NPs [disregarding anomalies])

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Summary

Introduction

Formal thought disorder (FTD) is clinically manifest primarily as speech that is disorganized and hard to follow, exhibiting loose associations, derailment, tangentiality, or incoherence. This invites identification of precise linguistic markers of this syndrome, which would correspond to its clinical descriptors, with consideration of how language markers would relate to well-established neurocognitive impairments seen in tests of executive functioning or semantic processing.[1,2,3,4] Previous linguistic studies of spontaneous speech in schizophrenia (SZ)[5,6,7,8,9] have typically documented a reduction of syntactic complexity and increase of syntactic errors. There is evidence for a strong association between language impairment and cognitive decline in FTD,[12,13,14,15,16,17] and some authors have argued that all SZ is inherently language linked.[18,19,20] Enhanced linguistic profiling will support the inroads made into the use of language as a prognostic indicator and marker of disease progression in SZ,[6,8,21,22,23,24,25] paralleling the critical diagnostic and prognostic role of language in other cognitive disorders, including autism spectrum disorders,[26] depression,[27] Huntington’s,28 and Alzheimer’s29 disease

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