“…We found no differences in performance between the typical, atypical, and unmedicated subjects, which we believe is simply due to a low number of subjects in the atypical and unmedicated groups. There is much evidence to support the idea that atypical antipsychotics help certain types of cognitive processes, including verbal fluency, verbal memory, general intelligence, continuous performance test, and spatial working memory, among others (Harvey, Green, McGurk, & Meltzer, 2003;Weickert et al, 2003). It has also been found that certain atypical medications (e.g., olanzapine, risperidone, and quetiapine) have a more advantageous effect than typical medications (e.g., haloperidol) on such cognitive processes as attention, motor function, visuospatial tasks, immediate recall tasks, verbal memory, and verbal fluency (Keefe et al, 2006;Purdon, Malla, Labelle, & Lit, 2001;Velligan et al, 2002).…”