“…Schizophrenia researchers have subsequently conducted fMRI studies to record neural activity while people with schizophrenia and healthy controls view the Abell et al animations, with some contradictory results (see Das, Lagopoulos, Coulston, Henderson, & Malhi, 2012;Martin, Dza, Robinson, Reutens, & Mowry, 2016;Pedersen et al, 2012), while several behavioural studies have used different variants of Abell et al's task, again with some mixed results (see Bliksted, Shiho, & Koelkebeck, 2016, for a comprehensive meta-analysis and review of behavioural and imaging studies using the animated triangles task with individuals with autism or schizophrenia). For example, Russell, Reynaud, Herba, Morris, and Corcoran (2006) used the same animated triangles stimuli and instructions as Abell et al and found that people with schizophrenia spontaneously generated fewer mental-state terms than controls when describing the GD and TOM trials, while subgroups of paranoid and passive patients 'read too much' into the randomly moving shapes (i.e., they inappropriately ascribed intent in the random condition).…”