Schizophrenia has been dubbed a neurodevelopmental disorder, and many patients and their relatives have brain, neurological, and neuropsychological disturbances. Schizophrenia shows some genetic connection to affective psychosis, and patients with affective psychosis also have neurological abnormalities and neuropsychological impairment. To determine whether these deficits are associated with risk for the disorder, Schubert and McNeil (p.
758) examined young adult offspring of mothers with schizophrenia, mothers with affective psychosis, and healthy mothers. There was only one neuropsychological test on which both groups of high-risk offspring differed from the normal-risk offspring. Also, the affective-risk group was less likely than the schizophrenia-risk group to score above the normal subjects’ 90
th percentile on multiple tests, and their level of neurological abnormalities was similar to that of the normal-risk offspring. These findings suggest that schizophrenia and affective psychosis belong to different biological categories.