The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has updated its Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including with new information specifically addressed to individuals in the European Economic Area. As described in the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, this website utilizes cookies, including for the purpose of offering an optimal online experience and services tailored to your preferences.

Please read the entire Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. By closing this message, browsing this website, continuing the navigation, or otherwise continuing to use the APA's websites, you confirm that you understand and accept the terms of the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use, including the utilization of cookies.

×
Letter to the EditorFull Access

Early-Stage Vision and Schizophrenia

To the Editor: We read with interest the excellent contribution of Pamela D. Butler, Ph.D., et al. (1) on the dysfunction of magnocellular visual channels in schizophrenia. We would like to raise some points that merit further clarification and may increase the impact of their contribution. First, the effect of medication on their results should be investigated and discussed in more detail. Although the authors cite a single study in which there was found no acute effects of haloperidol, there is evidence that dopamine receptor antagonists alter both early and late components of visual event-related potentials and that a hypodopaminergic state may predominantly disrupt magnocellular functions (2). More directly, we found that schizophrenia patients receiving higher doses of conventional antipsychotics and exhibiting more severe drug-induced parkinsonism showed poorer magnocellular function (3). This issue is related to the problem of symptom variation. It has been demonstrated with both psychophysics and electrophysiological methods that the presence of different symptoms of schizophrenia is related to distinct patterns of visual information-processing abnormalities (4, 5). These questions should be addressed with correlation/covariance analyses or with the consideration of clinical subtypes, which may help resolve the apparent controversy of the literature correctly outlined, but not targeted, by the authors.

Dr. Butler et al. (1) suggested that magnocellular dysfunction is not related to attentional impairment. However, the sharp separation of early-stage vision and attention is somewhat artificial. The dorsal system, which receives its major input from magnocellular pathways, plays an important role in the attentional regulation of very early perceptual processes and is believed to participate in the integration of domain-specific information mediated by the ventral system (6). Therefore, the magnocellular deficit they measured can be a crucial aspect of attentional problems rather than an independent phenomenon.

This possibility may conceptually lead to the authors’ final question for further research: What is the relationship between early visual dysfunctions and higher-level visuocognitive anomalies? We recently demonstrated that nonmedicated schizophrenia patients with spared magnocellular function exhibited dysfunction in a visual backward-masking task in which the spatial location of letters must be detected (a function of the dorsal stream) (7). Therefore, it seems that higher-level visual anomalies cannot be fully explained by a pure magnocellular deficit, which is likely to show a great degree of heterogeneity among patients with schizophrenia.

References

1. Butler PD, Schechter I, Zemon V, Schwartz SG, Greenstein VC, Gordon J, Schroeder CE, Javitt DC: Dysfunction of early-stage visual processing in schizophrenia. Am J Psychiatry 2001; 158:1126-1133LinkGoogle Scholar

2. Masson G, Mestre D, Blin O: Dopaminergic modulation of visual sensitivity in man. Fundam Clin Pharmacol 1993; 7:449-463Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

3. Kéri S, Antal A, Szekeres G, Benedek G, Janka Z: Spatiotemporal visual processing in schizophrenia. J Neuropsychiatr Clin Neurosci (in press)Google Scholar

4. Foxe JJ, Doniger GM, Javitt DC: Early visual processing deficits in schizophrenia: impaired P1 generation revealed by high-density electrical mapping. Neuroreport 2001; 12:3815-3820Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

5. Slaghuis WL: Contrast sensitivity for stationary and drifting spatial frequency gratings in positive- and negative-symptom schizophrenia. J Abnorm Psychol 1998; 107:49-62Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

6. Kanwisher N: Neural events and perceptual awareness. Cognition 2001; 79:89-113Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

7. Kéri S, Antal A, Szekeres G, Benedek G, Janka Z: Visual information processing in patients with schizophrenia: evidence for the impairment of central mechanisms. Neurosci Lett 2000; 293:69-71Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar