These results suggest that although patients may show lower attentional functioning than non-patients on tasks requiring a high response rate, their attentional performance remains within the normal range on most dimensions.
Cognitive and neuropsychological deficits have long been recognised as part of the schizophrenic syndrome. As these deficits persist after acute psychosis subsides and contribute to the social and occupational difficulties often experienced by individuals with schizophrenia, researchers have begun to consider the applicability of neuropsychological rehabilitation techniques to the treatment of schizophrenic neuropsychological deficits. Although the effectiveness of cognitive rehabilitation programmes in schizophrenia has been addressed, no attention has been afforded to whether the trained patient perceives improvement of the cognitive processes instructed. The present study utilised a treatment versus control group comparison design to evaluate the effect of a neuropsychological rehabilitation programme on the perception of improvement both in schizophrenic patients and their therapists. Twenty-four participants diagnosed with schizophrenia participated in the study. One half of the sample was trained by means of Attention Process Training (APT) and the rest of the patients comprised the control group. No significant differences in perception of improvement were found between treatment and control group, and trained patients found the APT more useful than did their therapists.
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