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The neural correlates of implicit sequence learning in schizophrenia.


ABSTRACT: Twenty-seven schizophrenia spectrum patients and 25 healthy controls performed a probabilistic version of the serial reaction time task (SRT) that included sequence trials embedded within random trials. Patients showed diminished, yet measurable, sequence learning. Postexperimental analyses revealed that a group of patients performed above chance when generating short spans of the sequence. This high-generation group showed SRT learning that was similar in magnitude to that of controls. Their learning was evident from the very 1st block; however, unlike controls, learning did not develop further with continued testing. A subset of 12 patients and 11 controls performed the SRT in conjunction with positron emission tomography. High-generation performance, which corresponded to SRT learning in patients, correlated to activity in the premotor cortex and parahippocampus. These areas have been associated with stimulus-driven visuospatial processing. Taken together, these results suggest that a subset of patients who showed moderate success on the SRT used an explicit stimulus-driven strategy to process the sequential stimuli. This adaptive strategy facilitated sequence learning but may have interfered with conventional implicit learning of the overall stimulus pattern.

SUBMITTER: Marvel CL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2799042 | biostudies-literature | 2007 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The neural correlates of implicit sequence learning in schizophrenia.

Marvel Cherie L CL   Turner Beth M BM   O'Leary Daniel S DS   Johnson Hans J HJ   Pierson Ronald K RK   Ponto Laura L Boles LL   Andreasen Nancy C NC  

Neuropsychology 20071101 6


Twenty-seven schizophrenia spectrum patients and 25 healthy controls performed a probabilistic version of the serial reaction time task (SRT) that included sequence trials embedded within random trials. Patients showed diminished, yet measurable, sequence learning. Postexperimental analyses revealed that a group of patients performed above chance when generating short spans of the sequence. This high-generation group showed SRT learning that was similar in magnitude to that of controls. Their le  ...[more]

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