Social functioning and frontal alpha asymmetry in schizophrenia.

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Emily A Farina, Michal Assaf, Silvia Corbera, Jimmy Choi, Christine Yantz, Chi-Ming Chen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Schizophrenia (SZ) is a psychiatric disorder that often involves reduced social functioning. Frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) is a neurophysiological marker extracted from electroencephalogram (EEG) data that is likely related to motivational and emotional tendencies, such as reduced motivation across various psychiatric disorders, including SZ. Therefore, it may offer a neurophysiological marker for social functioning.

Objectives: The present study aimed to examine whether FAA is related to social functioning in schizophrenia. Additionally, a group of people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) was included to explore whether findings are unique to schizophrenia, or whether they are found in another diagnostic group with atypical social behaviors.

Methods: Analysis of variance and regression models were used to evaluate data from resting-state EEG, clinical interviews, and self-report measures. Data from 33 participants with SZ were compared to 38 healthy controls and 30 individuals with ASD.

Results: Although people with SZ showed differences in FAA compared to healthy controls, the altered neurophysiology was not related to reduced social functioning in SZ. However, FAA was related to social functioning in people without a psychiatric diagnosis. Additionally, comparisons between the SZ and ASD group revealed few differences in patterns of FAA and social functioning, suggesting commonalities between the disorders in these areas.

Conclusions: FAA likely does not present a neurophysiological marker for reduced social functioning in schizophrenia, though future work should examine its role in other possible clinical manifestations shared between schizophrenia and ASD.

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来源期刊
Journal of psychiatric research
Journal of psychiatric research 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
2.10%
发文量
622
审稿时长
130 days
期刊介绍: Founded in 1961 to report on the latest work in psychiatry and cognate disciplines, the Journal of Psychiatric Research is dedicated to innovative and timely studies of four important areas of research: (1) clinical studies of all disciplines relating to psychiatric illness, as well as normal human behaviour, including biochemical, physiological, genetic, environmental, social, psychological and epidemiological factors; (2) basic studies pertaining to psychiatry in such fields as neuropsychopharmacology, neuroendocrinology, electrophysiology, genetics, experimental psychology and epidemiology; (3) the growing application of clinical laboratory techniques in psychiatry, including imagery and spectroscopy of the brain, molecular biology and computer sciences;
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