“…Patients with schizophrenia demonstrate severe neurocognitive deficits that affect not only higher-order cognitive function (Goldberg and Gold, 1995;Goldman-Rakic, 1994;Green and Nuechterlein, 1999b;Jaeger et al, 2003;Saykin et al, 1994) but also early levels of perceptual processing (Braff et al, 1991;Javitt et al, 1999;Turetsky et al, 2003). In the visual system, deficits have been shown to include increased visual thresholds (Cadenhead et al, 1997;Schechter et al, 2003), greater sensitivity to backward masking (Braff et al, 1991;Butler et al, 1996;Green and Nuechterlein, 1999a;Schechter et al, 2003), and decreased contrast sensitivity (Butler et al, 2005;Keri et al, 2002;Slaghuis and Curran, 1999), as well as motion perception (Chen et al, 1999;Li, 2002;Schwartz et al, 1999) and eye tracking deficits (Holzman et al, 1974;Levy et al, 1993;Trillenberg et al, 2004).…”