2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2003.12.014
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Impaired performance in a working memory binding task in patients with schizophrenia

Abstract: This study investigated feature binding in a working memory task in patients with schizophrenia and in normal controls. Twenty-five patients and 25 controls participated. On each trial, three drawings of familiar objects were presented sequentially, each in a different cell of a 3=3 grid. In different blocks of trials, participants remembered either individual features (object and location conditions) or an object and its location (combination condition). The results showed that patients were slower and less a… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The proposals put forward by Miyake et al (2000) in particular allow us to justify our assessment of the central executive, and it is now possible to use a variety of methodologies to assess the episodic buffer (Prabhakaran et al 2000;Burglen et al 2004;Quinette et al 2006b). …”
Section: Memory Concepts and Tasksmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The proposals put forward by Miyake et al (2000) in particular allow us to justify our assessment of the central executive, and it is now possible to use a variety of methodologies to assess the episodic buffer (Prabhakaran et al 2000;Burglen et al 2004;Quinette et al 2006b). …”
Section: Memory Concepts and Tasksmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The interactions between the episodic buffer and the central executive and episodic memory will form a key research topic over the coming years (Baddeley 2003). The interest of the concept of episodic buffer, at the boundary between short term and long term memory systems, has already been demonstrated in various pathologies, notably transient global amnesia (Quinette et al 2006a, b) and schizophrenia (Burglen et al 2004). Future works is needed to better understand the relationships between executive functions and the central executive of working memory.…”
Section: Long-term Cognitive Representation Systems: a Monohierarchicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This task consists in exposing rats to objects that occupy particular locations and then assessing their memory for this configuration by changing the locations occupied by the objects. Object-in-place recognition memory has been shown to be disrupted in patients with Alzheimer's disease (Fowler et al 2002) and schizophrenia (Wood et al 2002;Burglen et al 2004). Specific lesions of the hippocampus and interconnected cortical regions, such as the PFC and perirhinal cortex have been shown to impair object-in-place memory Warburton 2008, 2013).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It critically relies on rapid steering by "external cues" (such as item or item location) and thus requires specific binding processes between features of the environment and specific control settings. Since patients diagnosed with schizophrenia have been shown to be impaired in binding items to a location (e.g., Burglen et al, 2004), we would tentatively predict that these patients would develop the location-specific proportion congruency effect to a much smaller extent than is the case for healthy controls. Hence, patients diagnosed with schizophrenia may experience difficulty with on-the-fly adaptation as they fail to appropriately use the cues that in healthy subjects develop on the basis of binding processes.…”
Section: Proportion Congruency Effectsmentioning
confidence: 85%