Web of Science: 1 cites, Scopus: 1 cites, Google Scholar: cites,
Speech Illusions in People at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis Linked to Clinical Outcome
Hird, Emily J
Ohmuro, Noriyuki
Allen, Paul
Moseley, Peter
Kempton, Matthew J
Modinos, Gemma
Sachs, Gabriele
van der Gaag, Mark
de Haan, Lieuwe
Gadelha, Ary
Bressan, Rodrigo Affonseca
Barrantes-Vidal, Neus (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Departament de Psicologia Clínica i de la Salut)
Ruhrmann, Stephan
Catalan, Ana
McGuire, Philip

Data: 2022
Resum: Around 20% of people at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis later develop a psychotic disorder, but it is difficult to predict who this will be. We assessed the incidence of hearing speech (termed speech illusions [SIs]) in noise in CHR participants and examined whether this was associated with adverse clinical outcomes. At baseline, 344 CHR participants and 67 healthy controls were presented with a computerized white noise task and asked whether they heard speech, and whether speech was neutral, affective, or whether they were uncertain about its valence. After 2 years, we assessed whether participants transitioned to psychosis, or remitted from the CHR state, and their functioning. CHR participants had a lower sensitivity to the task. Logistic regression revealed that a bias towards hearing targets in stimuli was associated with remission status (OR = 0. 21, P = 042). Conversely, hearing SIs with uncertain valence at baseline was associated with reduced likelihood of remission (OR = 7. 72. P =. 007). When we assessed only participants who did not take antipsychotic medication at baseline, the association between hearing SIs with uncertain valence at baseline and remission likelihood remained (OR = 7. 61, P =. 043) and this variable was additionally associated with a greater likelihood of transition to psychosis (OR = 5. 34, P =. 029). In CHR individuals, a tendency to hear speech in noise, and uncertainty about the affective valence of this speech, is associated with adverse outcomes. This task could be used in a battery of cognitive markers to stratify CHR participants according to subsequent outcomes.
Ajuts: Agencia Estatal de Investigación PSI2017-87512-C2-1-R
Drets: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, sempre que no sigui amb finalitats comercials, i sempre que es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Llengua: Anglès
Document: Article ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Matèria: Remission ; Signal-detection ; Transition ; Uncertainty ; White noise task
Publicat a: Schizophrenia bulletin, Vol. 49 (december 2022) , p. 339-349, ISSN 1745-1701

DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbac163
PMID: 36516396


11 p, 3.5 MB

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