Eighteen chronic schizophrenia patients and 14 controls were given tests that have been linked primarily to ventral (orbitofrontal) or to dorsolateral prefrontal dysfunctions in neurological patients and in nonhuman animal subjects having discrete frontal lesions. Schizophrenia patients were significantly impaired on object alternation and delayed alternation tasks but not on classical delayed response (DR). Schizophrenia patients performed well on the classical version of the DR task and their DR performance correlated significantly with measures of sustained attention. Future research is needed to interpret the contributions of attention, interference, and memory load to neuropsychological performance in schizophrenia. Additional studies are required to determine whether the frontal deficits reflect diffuse brain damage, circumscribed prefrontal damage, or damage in other brain regions having prefrontal connections.
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