Self-disorders in individuals with attenuated psychotic symptoms: Contribution of a dysfunction of autobiographical memory

  • Fabrice Berna
  • Anja S Göritz
  • Johanna Schröder
  • Brice Martin
  • Michel Cermolacce
  • Mélissa C Allé
  • Jean-Marie Danion
  • Christine V Cuervo-Lombard
  • Steffen Moritz

Abstract

Patients with schizophrenia and people with subclinical psychotic symptoms have difficulties getting a clear and stable representation of their self. The cognitive mechanisms involved in this reduced clarity of self-concept remain poorly understood. The present study examined whether an altered way of thinking or reasoning about one's past may account for the reduced clarity of self-concept in individuals with attenuated psychotic symptoms (APS). An online study comprising 667 participants examined the capacity to give a meaning to past events and to scrutinize autobiographical memory to better understand him/herself. Our results showed that in this sample, individuals with APS (n=49) have a lower clarity of self-concept and a higher tendency to scrutinize autobiographical memory than controls subjects (n=147). A mediation analysis performed on the full sample revealed that the relation between APS and clarity of self-concept was mediated by a tendency to scrutinize autobiographical memory. Our results suggest that the weakness of self-concept, which increases with the intensity of psychotic symptoms, may be related to an altered function of autobiographical memory, so that examining past events may fail to sustain a stable and clear representation of the self when psychotic symptoms increase.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0165-1781
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 30.05.2016
PubMed 27058160