Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded in 19 healthy subjects as they completed two Sternberg (1969, American Scientist, 57, 421-457) memory tests. In separate sessions, either single digits (i.e., 0-9) or 10 abstract figures were used as stimuli. In both sessions, memory set sizes were 1 (M1), 2 (M2), or 4 (M4). The amplitude and latency of the parietal P400 and the frontocentral negativity preceding P400 varied significantly with set size, but only between M1 and M2, whereas reaction time increased dramatically from M1 to M2 and from M2 to M4. These findings challenge previous assertions that the ERPs reflect aspects of the exhaustive serial search proposed by Sternberg. A late parietal positivity (P620), which failed to vary with set size, was larger in response to figures than to digits and may represent the search for, or utilization of, semantic traces of the stimuli.
Disturbances of the topographical distribution of theta activity in the EEG spectra before and during voluntary movements were investigated in 31 neuroleptic-treated and in 13 untreated schizophrenics and matched controls as well as in 15 normals medicated with haloperidol. All 4 groups demonstrated similar topographical distribution of theta mean power density, with highest values over the midfrontal region. In the center frequency of the theta band, however, treated and untreated schizophrenics had lower values over the midfrontal region than at parietal electrodes. In controls and normals medicated with haloperidol, this frontoparietal "gradient" demonstrated the inverse picture, with highest values at the frontal midline electrode. Patients and controls differed significantly in this gradient. The slower theta activity over the midfrontal cortex in the schizophrenic patients is related to the hypofrontality hypothesis.
In a pilot study the Bereitschaftspotential (BP) was investigated in 16 patients suffering from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (mean age 58.6, mean severity of the illness according to Norris ALS score 76.4 points). Comparing the total ALS group (n=16) with matched controls no significant differences in the BP amplitude parameters were found. However, a subgroup of 7 ALS patients with signs of pronounced spasticity (hyperreflexia) differed significantly at the central midline from matched controls and significantly in addition from patients with a lower degree of spasticity. Controls as well as patients with a lower degree of spasticity had significantly higher BP amplitudes at the midline (electrode positions Cz and Pz, P<0.05, H-test). The correlation coefficient between the hyperreflexia Norris score and the various BP parameters for the total ALS sample (n=16) revealed a significant correlation especially over the midline. Stronger signs of spasticity (hyperreflexia) are associated with lower amplitudes of the BP.
This study is aimed at detecting biological markers for schizophrenia. For this purpose, a total of 70 subjects (21 schizophrenic patients, 27 first-degree relatives and 22 controls) performed a series of tests assessing various attentional, psychomotor and cognitive functions and saccadic eye movements. The schizophrenics performed significantly poorer than both high-risk and control subjects in most of the tests demanding attention, concentration and psychomotor speed (d2 concentration test, reaction times and Stroop test of perceptual interference) as well as cognition (Wechsler intelligence scales). On the other hand, these tests did not differentiate between the high-risk and control subjects. This distinction, however, could be made by two other parameters: hypometria score of saccadic eye movements and ratio of verbal to performance intelligence scores. Both parameters were significantly increased in both the schizophrenic and the high-risk group, distinguishing both from the control group. The relevance of these findings in indicating a schizophrenic disposition is discussed.
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