Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10668/725
Title: Confabulation in schizophrenia: a neuropsychological study.
Authors: Lorente-Rovira, E
Santos-Gómez, J L
Moro, M
Villagrán, J M
McKenna, P J
metadata.dc.contributor.authoraffiliation: [Lorente-Rovira,E; McKenna,PJ] CIBERSAM, Spain. [Lorente-Rovira,E] Clinic University Hospital, Valencia. [Santos-Gómez, JL]Psychiatry Unit, Virgen de la Luz Hospital, Cuenca, Spain. [Moro,M] Basic Psychology, Clinic Psychology and Psychobiology Department, Jaume I University, Castellón, Spain. [Villagrán,JM] Psychiatry Hospitalization Unit, Jerez de la Frontera Hospital, Cádiz (SAS), Spain. [McKenna,PJ] Benito Menni CASM, Sant Boi de Llobregat, Barcelona.
Keywords: Schizophrenia;Confabulation;Intrusion errors;Episodic memory;Executive dysfunction;Semantic memory dysfunction;Esquizofrenia;Confusión;Memoria Episódica;Función Ejecutiva;Trastornos de la Memoria;Semántica
metadata.dc.subject.mesh: Medical Subject Headings::Psychiatry and Psychology::Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms::Neurobehavioral Manifestations::Confusion
Medical Subject Headings::Psychiatry and Psychology::Psychological Phenomena and Processes::Mental Processes::Executive Function
Medical Subject Headings::Check Tags::Female
Medical Subject Headings::Organisms::Eukaryota::Animals::Chordata::Vertebrates::Mammals::Primates::Haplorhini::Catarrhini::Hominidae::Humans
Medical Subject Headings::Check Tags::Male
Medical Subject Headings::Psychiatry and Psychology::Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms::Neurobehavioral Manifestations::Memory Disorders
Medical Subject Headings::Named Groups::Persons::Age Groups::Adult::Middle Aged
Medical Subject Headings::Health Care::Environment and Public Health::Public Health::Epidemiologic Methods::Statistics as Topic::Analysis of Variance::Multivariate Analysis
Medical Subject Headings::Psychiatry and Psychology::Behavioral Disciplines and Activities::Psychological Tests::Neuropsychological Tests
Medical Subject Headings::Psychiatry and Psychology::Mental Disorders::Schizophrenia and Disorders with Psychotic Features::Schizophrenia
Medical Subject Headings::Information Science::Information Science::Communication::Language::Linguistics::Semantics
Medical Subject Headings::Health Care::Environment and Public Health::Public Health::Epidemiologic Methods::Statistics as Topic
Medical Subject Headings::Psychiatry and Psychology::Psychological Phenomena and Processes::Mental Processes::Learning::Verbal Learning
Medical Subject Headings::Health Care::Health Services Administration::Patient Care Management::Comprehensive Health Care::Primary Health Care::Continuity of Patient Care::Transition to Adult Care
Issue Date: Nov-2010
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Citation: Lorente-Rovira E, Santos-Gómez JL, Moro M, Villagrán JM, McKenna PJ. Confabulation in schizophrenia: a neuropsychological study. J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2010 Nov; 16(6):1018-26
Abstract: Confabulation has been documented in schizophrenia, but its neuropsychological correlates appear to be different from those of confabulation in neurological disease states. Forty-five schizophrenic patients and 37 controls were administered a task requiring them to recall fables. They also underwent testing with a range of memory and executive tasks. The patients with schizophrenia produced significantly more confabulations than the controls. After correcting for multiple comparisons, confabulation was not significantly associated with memory impairment, and was associated with impairment on only one of eight executive measures, the Brixton Test. Confabulation scores were also associated with impairment on two semantic memory tests. Confabulation was correlated with intrusion errors in recall, but not false positive errors in a recognition task. The findings suggest that confabulation in schizophrenia is unrelated to the episodic memory impairment seen in the disorder. However, the association with a circumscribed deficit in executive function could be consistent with a defective strategic retrieval account of confabulation similar to that of Moscovitch and co-workers, interacting with defective semantic memory.
Description: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't;
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10668/725
metadata.dc.relation.publisherversion: http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=7925820
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1017/S1355617710000718
ISSN: 1469-7661 (Online)
1355-6177 (Print)
Appears in Collections:01- Artículos - Hospital de Jerez

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