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Action prediction in psychosis
PsychologySchizophrenia

Action prediction in psychosis

N. Montobbio, E. Zingarelli, et al.

Discover how patients with psychosis perceive and predict the actions of others differently! This captivating study, conducted by Noemi Montobbio and colleagues, highlights intriguing findings about evidence integration difficulties during movement observation and their relationship with negative symptoms.... show more
Abstract
Aberrant motor-sensory predictive functions have been linked to symptoms of psychosis, particularly reduced attenuation of self-generated sensations and misattribution of self-generated actions. Building on the parallels between prediction of self- and other-generated actions, this study aims to investigate whether individuals with psychosis also demonstrate abnormal perceptions and predictions of others' actions. Patients with psychosis and matched controls completed a two-alternative object size discrimination task. In each trial, they observed reaching actions towards a small and a large object, with varying levels of temporal occlusion ranging from 10% to 80% of movement duration. Their task was to predict the size of the object that would be grasped. We employed a novel analytic approach to examine how object size information was encoded and read out across progressive levels of occlusion with single-trial resolution. Patients with psychosis exhibited an overall pattern of reduced and discontinuous evidence integration relative to controls, characterized by a period of null integration up to 20% of movement duration, during which they did not read any size information. Surprisingly, this drop in accuracy in the initial integration period was not accompanied by a reduction in confidence. Difficulties in action prediction were correlated with the severity of negative symptoms and impaired functioning in social relationships.
Publisher
Schizophrenia
Published On
Jan 10, 2024
Authors
Noemi Montobbio, Enrico Zingarelli, Federica Folesani, Mariacarla Memeo, Enrico Croce, Andrea Cavallo, Luigi Grassi, Luciano Fadigas, Stefano Panzeri, Martino Belvederi Murri, Cristina Becchio
Tags
psychosisaction predictionevidence integrationtemporal occlusionnegative symptomssocial functioning
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