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Deficient motor synchrony in schizophrenia.
Authors:Manschreck  Theo C; Maher  Brendan A; Rucklos  Mary E; Veneer  Donald R  Jr; Ader  Deborah N
Abstract:Introduced a laboratory measure of motor function, synchronization of tapping with an auditory stimulus, as an index of motor disorganization in schizophrenia. It was hypothesized that (a) schizophrenics' performance on this task would be distinguishable from that of controls and would reflect a relative inability to take advantage of stimulus predictability, independent of task difficulty; (b) clinical measures of disturbed motor behavior would be associated with poorer synchronization; and (c) synchronization performance would be associated with clinical ratings of formal thought disorder and type-token ratio assessment of disorganization in spoken language. 16 schizophrenic, 8 affective, and 8 normal controls (18–48 yrs) were studied. The schizophrenics showed a specific pattern of disrupted synchrony not consistent with explanations based on S motivation, task difficulty, motor dexterity, a general psychosis factor, drug effects, or tapping speed ability. Deficient motor performance was associated with clinical evidence of abnormal movement and disturbed thinking and with the type-token ratio. (44 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)
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