OBJECTIVE: Previous studies of attention/information processing
impairments in schizophrenia suggest that patients with the deficit
syndrome should be characterized by impaired performance on measures of
visual information processing. Therefore, the authors examined whether two
measures of visual information processing, a degraded stimulus version of
the continuous performance test and a forced choice span of apprehension
task, were uniquely related to the deficit syndrome. METHOD: Performance on
the continuous performance test and span of apprehension task was examined
in 20 deficit and 56 nondeficit patients with schizophrenia and in 27
subjects in a normal comparison group. RESULTS: Deficit patients performed
significantly less well than both nondeficit patients and the normal
comparison group on the continuous performance test and span of
apprehension task. There were no significant differences between the
nondeficit patients and the normal group on the continuous performance
test, but nondeficit patients performed significantly less well on the span
of apprehension task than the normal group. Differences between the deficit
and nondeficit patients in performance on the continuous performance test
and span of apprehension task were not related to total scores on the Brief
Psychiatric Rating Scale factor 1 or on the Thought, Language, and
Communication scale or to neuroleptic level. CONCLUSIONS: The results
suggest that deficit patients are uniquely characterized by impaired
performance on the continuous performance test. The deficit patients'
differential performance on the continuous performance test may be related
to either an inability to activate and allocate attention or an impairment
in the perceptual organization of visual information.Abstract Teaser