Behavioral evidence of impaired self-referential processing in patients with affective disorders and first-episode schizophrenia

Despite the critical role of self-disturbance in psychiatric diagnosis and treatment, its diverse behavioral manifestations remain poorly understood. This investigation aimed to elucidate unique patterns of self-referential processing in affective disorders and first-episode schizophrenia. A total o...

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 14; no. 1; p. 10754
Main Authors Zhao, Yanli, Xu, Jiahua, Hong, Jiangyue, Xu, Xuejing, Fan, Hongzhen, Zhang, Jinguo, Li, Dong, Chen, Jingxu, Wu, Yaxue, Li, Yanli, Tan, Yunlong, Tan, Shuping
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 10.05.2024
Nature Publishing Group
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Despite the critical role of self-disturbance in psychiatric diagnosis and treatment, its diverse behavioral manifestations remain poorly understood. This investigation aimed to elucidate unique patterns of self-referential processing in affective disorders and first-episode schizophrenia. A total of 156 participants (41 first-episode schizophrenia [SZ], 33 bipolar disorder [BD], 44 major depressive disorder [MDD], and 38 healthy controls [HC]) engaged in a self-referential effect (SRE) task, assessing trait adjectives for self-descriptiveness, applicability to mother, or others, followed by an unexpected recognition test. All groups displayed preferential self- and mother-referential processing with no significant differences in recognition scores. However, MDD patients showed significantly enhanced self-referential recognition scores and increased bias compared to HC, first-episode SZ, and BD. The present study provides empirical evidence for increased self-focus in MDD and demonstrates that first-episode SZ and BD patients maintain intact self-referential processing abilities. These findings refine our understanding of self-referential processing impairments across psychiatric conditions, suggesting that it could serve as a supplementary measure for assessing treatment response in first-episode SZ and potentially function as a discriminative diagnostic criterion between MDD and BD.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-024-60498-5