2012
DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.111.102053
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Childhood cognitive function and adult psychopathology: associations with psychotic and non-psychotic symptoms in the general population

Abstract: BackgroundLower cognitive ability in childhood is associated with increased risk of future schizophrenia, but its relationship with adult psychotic-like experiences and other psychopathology is less understood.AimsTo investigate whether this childhood risk factor is shared with adult subclinical psychiatric phenotypes including psychotic-like experiences and general psychiatric morbidity.MethodA population-based sample of participants born in Great Britain during 1 week in March 1946 was contacted up to 20 tim… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Deficits across a range of cognitive skills have increasingly been recognized as a core feature of psychotic illness, with cognitive deficits manifesting in schizophrenia, schizotypal personality disorder, and schizophrenia patients’ unaffected first degree relatives [5355]. However, despite large-scale longitudinal birth-cohort data implicating deficits in general cognitive function [g] at ages 8, 11, and 15 in the manifestation of later subclinical psychotic symptoms in middle age [56], cross-sectional studies investigating the role of subclinical psychosis in neurocognitive performance have produced inconsistent results. While some studies have linked subclinical psychosis to deficits in cognitive function including visual memory and visuoconstructive performance [57], verbal fluency [5860], working memory [61], selective and sustained attention [60, 6265], cognitive set shifting [66], and capacity for abstract reasoning [66], other studies have found no significant links between subclinical psychosis and performance deficits in these cognitive areas [6773].…”
Section: Neurocognitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Deficits across a range of cognitive skills have increasingly been recognized as a core feature of psychotic illness, with cognitive deficits manifesting in schizophrenia, schizotypal personality disorder, and schizophrenia patients’ unaffected first degree relatives [5355]. However, despite large-scale longitudinal birth-cohort data implicating deficits in general cognitive function [g] at ages 8, 11, and 15 in the manifestation of later subclinical psychotic symptoms in middle age [56], cross-sectional studies investigating the role of subclinical psychosis in neurocognitive performance have produced inconsistent results. While some studies have linked subclinical psychosis to deficits in cognitive function including visual memory and visuoconstructive performance [57], verbal fluency [5860], working memory [61], selective and sustained attention [60, 6265], cognitive set shifting [66], and capacity for abstract reasoning [66], other studies have found no significant links between subclinical psychosis and performance deficits in these cognitive areas [6773].…”
Section: Neurocognitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In one of the first studies to directly ask whether cognition is intact in individuals who endorse psychotic-like experiences, Barnett and colleagues (2012) utilized a population-based sample in Great Britain of 2918 participants (Barnett et al 2012). Of those, 22% reported psychotic-like experiences at age 53, and those who reported psychotic-like experiences had poorer childhood cognitive test scores at ages 8 and 15.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However research suggests that approximately 8–20% of clinically healthy individuals endorse occasional psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) that may or may not impact functioning (1, 2). As such, psychotic experiences occur on a continuum, with a subset of the general population experiencing PLEs in the absence of a diagnosable disorder, while another subset (e.g., individuals with schizophrenia) experience frequent and debilitating psychosis in conjunction with other psychiatric symptoms (3).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This hypothesis was based on previous literature showing that greater PLEs (2, 7) and lower network efficiency (32) are associated with lower cognitive ability – associations we hoped to replicate and extend to the general population, in order to test the psychosis continuum model. Additionally, we hypothesized that efficiency of these networks would mediate the relationship between psychosis and cognitive ability, suggesting a shared mechanism between these two phenotypes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%