Auditory verbal hallucinations reflect stable auditory attention deficits: a prospective study
Autor: | Hugo A. Jørgensen, Erik Johnsen, Rune A. Kroken, Else-Marie Løberg |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Group based Psychosis Hallucinations Cognitive Neuroscience Audiology Dichotic Listening Tests Auditory attention medicine Humans Attention Prospective Studies Psychiatry Prospective cohort study Cognitive vulnerability Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale Dichotic listening Middle Aged medicine.disease Psychiatry and Mental health Psychotic Disorders Schizophrenia Female Psychology |
Zdroj: | Cognitive neuropsychiatry. 20(1) |
ISSN: | 1464-0619 |
Popis: | Previous studies have shown that auditory verbal hallucinations (AVHs) in psychosis are associated with reduced verbal auditory attention. Whether this is an effect of ongoing AVH or reflects a more stable cognitive vulnerability also present after treating the AVH is unknown. The aim of this study was to follow patients with acute psychosis with and without AVH, and to test their auditory attention in a more stabilised clinical phase.Fifty patients (35 males and 15 females) were examined when admitted to an acute psychiatry ward and tested three months later with a dichotic listening test with attention instructions. The patients were divided into a frequent (n = 33) and non-frequent (n = 17) AVH group based on their score on the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale item hallucinatory behaviour (≥4 and ≤3, respectively) at baseline.A significant interaction emerged between AVH group and attention instruction condition; the frequent AVH group failed to control their auditory attention as opposed to the non-frequent AVH group.Patients with frequent AVH in an acute psychotic state showed impaired auditory attention three months after their AVH had been treated, indicating a stable cognitive vulnerability factor for experiencing AVH. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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