“…An important research question is whether DS represents a more severe form of the same illness with respects to NDS or a separate disease entity. Brain imaging (Gonul et al, 2003;Heckers et al, 1999;Lahti et al, 2001;Tamminga et al, 1992;Vaiva et al, 2002;Quarantelli et al, 2002;Galderisi et al, 2008;Volpe et al, 2012;Voineskos et al, 2013;Mucci et al, 2015a;Spalletta et al, 2015;Wheeler et al, 2015), electrophysiological (Ludewig and Vollenweider, 2002;Bucci et al, 2007;Mucci et al, 2007;Fisher et al, 2012;Li et al, 2013), and oculomotor data (Ross et al, 1996, Hong et al, 2003, showing either less or different abnormalities in patients with DS with respect to those with NDS, suggest that DS represents a separate disease entity with respect to other forms of schizophrenia, and not just the extreme end of a severity continuum. The evidence that DS and NDS have different risk factors (Dollfus et al, 1998;Kirkpatrick et al, 2002Kirkpatrick et al, , 2006Messias et al, 2004;Dickerson et al, 2006;Gallagher et al, 2007;Kallel et al, 2007) and recent taxometric/latent class analyses further support this hypothesis (Blanchard et al, 2005;Ahmed et al, 2015).…”