2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2005.05.015
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N400 anomalies in schizophrenia are correlated with the severity of formal thought disorder

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Cited by 65 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…The absence of significant between-group N400 effect differences in the present study contrasts with other studies where such differences were found to be associated with schizophrenia (Condray et al, 2003;Condray et al, 1999;Kostova et al, 2005;Kostova et al, 2003;Mathalon et al, 2002;Mitchell et al, 1991;Ohta et al, 1999;Strandburg et al, 1997), or with schizotypal personality (Kiang and Kutas, 2005;Kimble et al, 2000;Niznikiewicz et al, 2002), which is thought to share genetic and neurophysiological substrates with schizophrenia (Siever and Davis, 2004). Our results, however, are not an isolated instance, as there are other published reports in which no such differences were detected between schizophrenia patients and controls (Andrews et al, 1993;Koyama et al, 1994;Olichney et al, 1997).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 96%
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“…The absence of significant between-group N400 effect differences in the present study contrasts with other studies where such differences were found to be associated with schizophrenia (Condray et al, 2003;Condray et al, 1999;Kostova et al, 2005;Kostova et al, 2003;Mathalon et al, 2002;Mitchell et al, 1991;Ohta et al, 1999;Strandburg et al, 1997), or with schizotypal personality (Kiang and Kutas, 2005;Kimble et al, 2000;Niznikiewicz et al, 2002), which is thought to share genetic and neurophysiological substrates with schizophrenia (Siever and Davis, 2004). Our results, however, are not an isolated instance, as there are other published reports in which no such differences were detected between schizophrenia patients and controls (Andrews et al, 1993;Koyama et al, 1994;Olichney et al, 1997).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 96%
“…In addition, studies that found N400 effect differences between patients and controls may have examined more severely ill patients than studies that did not find such differences. In support of this hypothesis, some studies that found patient-control differences included a mixture of inpatients and outpatients (Kostova et al, 2005;Kostova et al, 2003;Mathalon et al, 2002;Ohta et al, 1999), whereas studies that found no such differences examined either outpatients only (our study and that of Olichney et al (1997)), patients with "no acute illness" (Koyama et al, 1994), or patients of unspecified admission status (Andrews et al, 1993). Nevertheless, comparing illness severity among these studies directly is difficult, as they used a variety of symptom rating scales.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 58%
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“…Numerous studies have found evidence for larger (more negative) than normal N400 amplitudes in response to contextually related items, and smaller than normal N400 semantic priming effects, in schizophrenia (Condray et al 2003;Condray et al 2010;Ditman and Kuperberg 2007;Kiang et al 2011;Kiang et al 2008;Kostova et al 2005;Kostova et al 2003;Laurent et al 2010;Mathalon et al 2010;Ohta et al 1999;Salisbury 2010;Salisbury 2008;Strandburg et al 1997). In contrast, a few other schizophrenia studies have found smaller than normal N400 amplitudes to contextually related targets and increased N400 relatedness priming effects (Kreher et al 2009;Kreher et al 2008;Mathalon et al 2002;Salisbury 2008).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%