Altered sense of agency in schizophrenia and the putative psychotic prodrome

Marta Hauser*, Guenther Knoblich, Bruno H. Repp, Marion Lautenschlager, Juergen Gallinat, Andreas Heinz, Martin Voss

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract (may include machine translation)

The mechanisms underlying distortions in sense of agency, i.e. the experience of controlling one's own actions and their consequences, in schizophrenia are not fully understood and have barely been investigated in patients classified as being in a putative psychotic prodrome. This study aims to expound the contribution of early and late illness-related processes. Thirty schizophrenia patients, 30 putatively prodromal patients and 30 healthy controls were instructed to reproduce a computer-generated series of drum sounds on a drum pad. While tapping, subjects heard either their self-produced tones or a computer-controlled reproduction of the drum tone series that used either exactly the same, an accelerated or decelerated tempo. Subjects had to determine the source of agency. Results show similar significant impairments in assigning the source of agency under ambiguous conditions in schizophrenia and putatively prodromal patients and an exaggerated self-attribution bias, both of which were significantly correlated with increased (ego-)psychopathology. Patient groups, however, benefited significantly more than controls from additional sensorimotor cues to agency. Sensorimotor input seems to be a compensatory mechanism involved in correctly attributing agency. We deduce that altered awareness of agency may hold promise as an additional risk factor for psychosis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)170-176
Number of pages7
JournalPsychiatry Research
Volume186
Issue number2-3
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 Apr 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Agency cues
  • At-risk
  • Passivity phenomena
  • Psychosis
  • Self

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