False memories in schizophrenia.

  • Steffen Moritz
  • Todd S Woodward
  • Carrie Cuttler
  • Jennifer C Whitman
  • Jason M Watson

Abstract

In prior studies, it was observed that patients with schizophrenia show abnormally high knowledge corruption (i.e., high-confident errors expressed as a percentage of all high-confident responses were increased for schizophrenic patients relative to controls). The authors examined the conditions under which excessive knowledge corruption occurred using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm. Whereas knowledge corruption in schizophrenia was significantly greater for false-negative errors relative to controls, no group difference occurred for false-positive errors. The groups showed a comparable high degree of confidence for false-positive recognition of critical lure items. Similar to findings collected in elderly participants, patients, but not controls, showed a strong positive correlation between the number of recognized studied items and false-positive recognition of the critical lure.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer2
ISSN0894-4105
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2004
pubmed 15099150