1996
DOI: 10.1016/0165-1781(96)02849-1
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Perceptual and attentional asymmetries in schizophrenia: further evidence for a left hemisphere deficit

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Cited by 55 publications
(51 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…59 Patients with schizophrenia have a selective deficit in the ability to process hierarchical stimuli at the local level. 60,61 Such a deficit is consistent with the reduced P1 amplitude observed in this study and suggests that the perceptual closure deficit may be due in part to the reduced ability of patients to process local features of the fragmented stimuli.…”
Section: Commentsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…59 Patients with schizophrenia have a selective deficit in the ability to process hierarchical stimuli at the local level. 60,61 Such a deficit is consistent with the reduced P1 amplitude observed in this study and suggests that the perceptual closure deficit may be due in part to the reduced ability of patients to process local features of the fragmented stimuli.…”
Section: Commentsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Local processing deficits have been consistently found in chronically ill schizophrenia patients in divided (ie, unbiased) attention conditions. 39,40 A local processing deficit was also found in early onset schizophrenia, but shifts of attention from the global to the local level accounted for the finding. 41 Directing attention toward the local level eliminated the local processing deficit in all 3 studies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…39,40,73 This pattern of findings has been interpreted as evidence of an attentional deficit that can be compensated by exogenous manipulation of attention. Although this interpretation may be correct, it is not possible to rule out the alternative possibility that the local processing deficit is a secondary effect of an impairment shifting attention from the global to the local level.…”
Section: Do Schizophrenia Patients Have a Local Processing Deficit?mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Lesions or seizures in the left temporal lobe of the brain, particularly in the superior gyrus, can produce hallucinated voices, typically in the right ear (Tanabe, Sawada, Asai, Okuda & Shiraishini, 1986). Additionally, people with auditory hallucinations have been found to have reduced metabolism in brain regions associated with language and speech processing (Cleghorn, Franco, Szechtman, Brown, et al, 1992), smaller left superior temporal gyri (Barta, Pearlson, Powers, Richards & Tune, 1990), and deficits in attentional tasks requiring the involvement of the left temporal cortex (Carter, Robertson, Nordahl, Chaderjian & Oshora-Celaya, 1996). articles text shape the experience.…”
Section: Voices May Indicate a Non-psychiatric Medical Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%