“…Depression has been identified as an independent dimension of schizophrenia (Marengo, Harrow, Herbener & Sands, 2000), and severe, respectively moderate, depressive symptoms are prevalent in chronic EOS patients (Fleischhaker et al, 2005;Remschmidt et al, 2007). Studies of adult and older patients with schizophrenia report no significant associations between the severity of depressive symptoms and that of impairments in verbal memory, visual memory, speed of information processing, attention, executive functions, visuospatial ability, or a composite cognitive score (Bozikas, Kosmidis, Kioperlidou & Karavatos, 2004;Chemerinski, Bowie, Anderson & Harvey, 2008;Gladsjo, McAdams, Palmer, Moore, Jeste & Heaton, 2004). However, the severity of depressive symptoms has been found to be negatively associated with deep verbal memory encoding efficacy, that is, effortful memory processes, in schizophrenia patients (Brebion, Smith, Amador, Malaspina & Gorman, 1997;Brebion, David, Bressan & Pilowsky, 2007).…”