Compared Chapman's “response‐bias” theory and Broen and Storms' “response‐disorganization” theory of schizophrenic psychological deficit in a combined experimental format. Twenty‐six hospitalized schizophrenics and 26 normal Ss, equivalent in age, education, and WAIS vocabulary, were administered a modification of Roberts and Schuhams' (1974) vocabulary sorting task. Ss chose a word conceptually similar to a referent from correct, moderate‐ or strong‐distracter, and irrelevant responses. Half of the participants performed under induced muscular tension (squeezing a hand dynamometer). Results indicated that, congruent with Broen and Storms' theory, heightened arousal increased frequency of nondominant, strong‐ distracter errors in normals, but did not affect moderate distracter selection. No significant arousal effects emerged in the schizophrenics. The patient group essentially performed according to Chapman's theory, making significantly more strong‐ than moderate‐distracter errors under both conditions. Rank orders of normal and schizophrenic errors did not differ significantly. Implications are discussed.
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