Eye movement impairment and schizotypal psychopathology
OBJECTIVE: Eye movement dysfunction in relation to a smooth pursuit task has been documented in schizophrenic patients and in patients with the related personality disorder, schizotypal personality disorder. To investigate which quantitative measures are associated with the eye movement dysfunction...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of psychiatry 1994-08, Vol.151 (8), p.1209-1215 |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE: Eye movement dysfunction in relation to a smooth pursuit task
has been documented in schizophrenic patients and in patients with the
related personality disorder, schizotypal personality disorder. To
investigate which quantitative measures are associated with the eye
movement dysfunction and whether the dysfunction is more related to the
psychotic-like or the deficit-like symptoms of schizotypal personality
disorder, ratings of eye movements in several groups of subjects were
compared. METHOD: The study groups consisted of 26 patients with
schizotypal personality disorder, 42 patients with other personality
disorders (22 who also had two or more schizotypal personality traits and
20 who had fewer than two), and 37 normal comparison subjects. Smooth
pursuit eye tracking of sinusoidal and constant velocity targets was
recorded by an infrared eye tracking system. Two raters evaluated pursuit
gain and large and small saccades in the direction of the target and in the
direction opposite to that of the target (quantitative ratings) and
constant velocity (qualitative rating). RESULTS: Patients with schizotypal
personality disorder and patients with other personality disorders and two
or more schizotypal traits, but not those with fewer than two schizotypal
traits, had significantly poorer qualitative ratings of tracking than the
normal comparison subjects. Neither gain nor any of the saccadic measures
significantly differed between groups. The number of large saccades in the
direction of the target was the only quantitative variable that predicted
low qualitative ratings. Qualitatively poor tracking was associated with
the deficit-like, but not the psychotic-like, symptoms of schizotypal
personality disorder. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with schizotypal personality
disorder demonstrate qualitatively poorer tracking than comparison groups,
and the impaired tracking is associated with deficit- like symptoms. |
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ISSN: | 0002-953X 1535-7228 |
DOI: | 10.1176/ajp.151.8.1209 |