Hearing 'Messages'
Embedded in Noise Could Be Early Sign of Schizophrenia
(November 01, 2007) -- A tendency to extract messages from meaningless
noise could be an
early sign of schizophrenia, according to a study by Yale School of
Medicine researchers (see also Schizophrenia).
The study this month in the British Journal of Psychiatry reported on 43
participants diagnosed with "prodromal symptoms" meaning they exhibited
early warning signs of psychosis such as social withdrawal, mild perceptual
alterations, or misinterpretation of social cues.
Participants in the study were randomly assigned to take the
anti-psychotic medication
olanzapine or a placebo, and then symptoms and neuropsychological
function were assessed for up to two years.
During the "babble task," participants listened with headphones to
overlapping recordings of six speakers reading neutral texts, which made the
words virtually incomprehensible. The participants were asked to repeat any
words or phrases that they heard. Only four words "increase," "children,"
"A-OK," and "Republican" were consistently reproduced.
Eighty percent of the participants who
"heard" phrases of four or more words in length went on to develop a
schizophrenia-related illness during times that they were not taking
olanzapine, said the lead author, Ralph Hoffman, M.D., associate professor
of psychiatry. In contrast, only six percent of those in the study converted
to schizophrenia-related illness if the phrases "heard" were less than three
words in length.
"A tendency to extract message-like meaning from meaningless sensory
information can, over time, produce a 'matrix of unreality' that triggers
the initial psychotic phase of schizophrenia-spectrum disorders," Hoffman
said.
He said further research is needed because of the small size of
this study. However, if these findings are verified, Hoffman added, they
could provide an inexpensive tool for identifying those individuals with
early warning signs of schizophrenia who would most likely benefit from
preventive drug therapy.
Source: NewsRx.com
Last updated: 11/07
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