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18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA

BACKGROUND: Heightened neural noise serves as a promising explanatory framework for schizophrenia (SZ) pathophysiology, yet its specific contribution to working memory (WM) deficits remains unclear. The perceptual template model (PTM), an established human-observer model of visual perception, assert...

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Autores principales: Ichinose, Megan, Park, Woon Ju, Radin, Duje, Park, Sohee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887272/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby014.071
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author Ichinose, Megan
Park, Woon Ju
Radin, Duje
Park, Sohee
author_facet Ichinose, Megan
Park, Woon Ju
Radin, Duje
Park, Sohee
author_sort Ichinose, Megan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Heightened neural noise serves as a promising explanatory framework for schizophrenia (SZ) pathophysiology, yet its specific contribution to working memory (WM) deficits remains unclear. The perceptual template model (PTM), an established human-observer model of visual perception, asserts that a system’s internal noise (IN) is due to both background, ‘additive’ noise and stimulus-driven ‘unfiltered’ noise. In this study, we assessed levels of PTM-derived additive and unfiltered IN in SZ during basic visual processing and tested their respective relations to patients’ visuospatial WM imprecision. METHODS: Individuals with SZ and demographically-matched healthy controls completed a perceptual discrimination task to estimate levels of IN and an analog visual WM task to examine the impact of internal noise on WM precision. The discrimination task involved distinguishing orientations of briefly presented gratings (1 cycle/°; tilted ±45° from vertical) embedded in varying levels of external noise (0–21%). Contrast thresholds were estimated, and additive and unfiltered IN levels were modeled from task performance with the PTM. The WM task required reproducing remembered orientations of high-contrast gratings (same size and spatial frequency as in the discrimination task) with a manual dial at a 1s delay. WM precision was computed as the concentration of the von Mises distribution, fit from subjects’ orientation errors. RESULTS: Additive and unfiltered IN during perceptual discrimination were both significantly increased in SZ compared to HC. WM precision was reduced in SZ compared to HC at every set size. Levels of unfiltered IN negatively correlated with WM precision in SZ, while both unfiltered and additive IN negatively correlated with WM precision in HC. For SZ, unfiltered IN was also negatively correlated with IQ, and WM precision was positively correlated with IQ in both groups. DISCUSSION: We found evidence of elevated IN levels during visual perception in SZ, though only unfiltered IN was inversely related to patients’ visual WM precision. Thus results indicate overall ‘noisy’ visual perception in SZ, but point to a more precise model of poorer signal filtering or noise suppression as contributing to WM deficits and potentially broader cognitive impairment. Future work must identify the neural drivers of IN levels, as they may shed light on differential implications of the excitation/inhibition imbalance in WM networks. Findings underscore the link between perception and WM encoding in SZ and offer a novel computational strategy for identifying common and unique pathophysiological mechanisms of SZ cognitive dysfunction.
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spelling pubmed-58872722018-04-11 18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA Ichinose, Megan Park, Woon Ju Radin, Duje Park, Sohee Schizophr Bull Abstracts BACKGROUND: Heightened neural noise serves as a promising explanatory framework for schizophrenia (SZ) pathophysiology, yet its specific contribution to working memory (WM) deficits remains unclear. The perceptual template model (PTM), an established human-observer model of visual perception, asserts that a system’s internal noise (IN) is due to both background, ‘additive’ noise and stimulus-driven ‘unfiltered’ noise. In this study, we assessed levels of PTM-derived additive and unfiltered IN in SZ during basic visual processing and tested their respective relations to patients’ visuospatial WM imprecision. METHODS: Individuals with SZ and demographically-matched healthy controls completed a perceptual discrimination task to estimate levels of IN and an analog visual WM task to examine the impact of internal noise on WM precision. The discrimination task involved distinguishing orientations of briefly presented gratings (1 cycle/°; tilted ±45° from vertical) embedded in varying levels of external noise (0–21%). Contrast thresholds were estimated, and additive and unfiltered IN levels were modeled from task performance with the PTM. The WM task required reproducing remembered orientations of high-contrast gratings (same size and spatial frequency as in the discrimination task) with a manual dial at a 1s delay. WM precision was computed as the concentration of the von Mises distribution, fit from subjects’ orientation errors. RESULTS: Additive and unfiltered IN during perceptual discrimination were both significantly increased in SZ compared to HC. WM precision was reduced in SZ compared to HC at every set size. Levels of unfiltered IN negatively correlated with WM precision in SZ, while both unfiltered and additive IN negatively correlated with WM precision in HC. For SZ, unfiltered IN was also negatively correlated with IQ, and WM precision was positively correlated with IQ in both groups. DISCUSSION: We found evidence of elevated IN levels during visual perception in SZ, though only unfiltered IN was inversely related to patients’ visual WM precision. Thus results indicate overall ‘noisy’ visual perception in SZ, but point to a more precise model of poorer signal filtering or noise suppression as contributing to WM deficits and potentially broader cognitive impairment. Future work must identify the neural drivers of IN levels, as they may shed light on differential implications of the excitation/inhibition imbalance in WM networks. Findings underscore the link between perception and WM encoding in SZ and offer a novel computational strategy for identifying common and unique pathophysiological mechanisms of SZ cognitive dysfunction. Oxford University Press 2018-04 2018-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5887272/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby014.071 Text en © Maryland Psychiatric Research Center 2018. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Ichinose, Megan
Park, Woon Ju
Radin, Duje
Park, Sohee
18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
title 18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_full 18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_fullStr 18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_full_unstemmed 18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_short 18.2 USING COMPUTATIONAL ESTIMATES OF INTERNAL “NOISE” TO CHARACTERIZE VISUAL PERCEPTUAL AND WORKING MEMORY DEFICITS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
title_sort 18.2 using computational estimates of internal “noise” to characterize visual perceptual and working memory deficits in schizophrenia
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5887272/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby014.071
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