The Latest Biology News And Medical NewsBiology News 2Health News 2Biology News 3Health News 3
HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
The self's broken border: Tracing the role of agency attribution in schizophrenia

Healthy individuals possess an intact ability to distinguish between events that occur as a result of their own actions and events that occur as the result of someone else's. This ability to attribute "self-agency" appears to be disrupted in individuals experiencing many kinds of delusions, including those associated with schizophrenia: Auditory hallucinations, thought insertions, and other so-called delusions of influence are all hallmarks of the psychopathology associated with the disease. In the presence of these delusions, self-produced sensory information is misperceived as being caused by an outside influence. In a new study that investigates how healthy individuals and schizophrenia patients interpret their visual worlds, scientists have shed light on the question of whether a broad disruption in the ability to ascribe self-agency might be related to symptoms of schizophrenia.

The work is reported in the June 21 issue of Current Biology by a group of researchers including Axel Lindner of the Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research and the California Institute of Technology.

In their study, the researchers compared the abilities of healthy individuals and schizophrenia patients to distinguish motion in the external world from motion caused by their own eye movements. In both cases, images pass over the surface of the retina, but the brain normally interprets such images very differently depending on whether the eyes and head are stationary. This interpretation is a specific example of agency attribution. The healthy brain can tell if the movement on the retina is caused by shifting the eyes (in which case image motion is "removed" from perception, and the visual world is experienced as stationary) or if movement on the retina cannot be attributed to shifts in gaze (in which case it is perceived as the actual movement of external objects).

Lindner and colleagues observed a clear correlation between the strength of certain del
'"/>

Contact: Heidi Hardman
hhardman@cell.com
1-617-397-2879
Cell Press
20-Jun-2005


Page: 1 2

Related biology news :

1. Where broken DNA is repaired
2. How fish mend a broken heart
3. UT Southwestern researchers find gene mutation that leads to broken hearts
4. A broken stress response system can contribute to Gleevec resistance
5. Transplanted stem cells show promise for mending broken hearts
6. Nanotubes inspire new technique for healing broken bones
7. Diabetes link to obesity broken in mice
8. Single stem cells from bone heal a broken heart
9. MIT team aims to mend broken hearts
10. Tracing Parkinsons lethal mechanism
11. Tracing the pathways of neurofibromatosis

Post Your Comments:
(Date:11/24/2009)...r 24, 2009) New research on bacterial communities...als predictable temporal patterns, suggesting that... for monitoring climate change in the polar region...ngs of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edi...rivers shifted synchronously over time, correlatin...
(Date:11/23/2009)...presents strong evidence that the "synergistic" ef...c-related pollution and indoor endotoxin causes mo...exposure alone. , Environmental health scienti...f Medicine have shown that children exposed to bot...oor endotoxin during early life are six times more...
(Date:11/23/2009)...ovember 23, 2009 Applied mathematicians dissected...folia ), a characteristic long leaf with a saddle-...ng the edges. The simple cause of the lily,s fan-l... during differential growthwas revealed by using a...s. , Haiyi Liang, a postdoctoral student at Harv...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Researchers establish common seasonal pattern among bacterial communities in Arctic rivers 2Exposure to both traffic, indoor pollutants puts some kids at higher risk for asthma later 2The cause behind the characteristic shape of a long leaf revealed 2Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 1Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 2Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 3Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 4Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 5Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 6Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 7Stereotaxis Reports 19 25 Second Quarter Revenue Growth 53810 8Lipo Flavonoid Launches New Video Testimonial 53808 1Lipo Flavonoid Launches New Video Testimonial 53808 2Lipo Flavonoid Launches New Video Testimonial 53808 3Sinking Economy Hit Hard by Soaring Healthcare Costs Says MedicareSupplementPlans com 53805 1Sinking Economy Hit Hard by Soaring Healthcare Costs Says MedicareSupplementPlans com 53805 2
(Date:11/24/2009)...am Connects Customers with Partners Validated to P...tek Products , Ottawa, ON...ding provider of products for biological sample co...ounced its new global partner program. The program... partner community and is designed to help partner...
(Date:11/23/2009)...k of it as origami very high-tech origami. , Res...ped a technique for fabricating three-dimensional,...ilms by coupling photolithography and a self-foldi...e films, only a few microns thick, offer mechanica...eces of the same material. , "This is a completel...
(Date:11/23/2009)...RNewswire-FirstCall/-YMBioSciencesInc.(NYSEAmex: Y...thatidentifiesandadvancesadiverseportfolioofpromis...ent,todayreportedthatCytopia(ASX:CYT)hascommencede...,orally-administeredJAK1/JAK2inhibitor.Thetrialisb...oposaltomergeCytopiaintoYMhasbeenpreviouslyannounc...
(Date:11/23/2009)...swire/-InimexPharmaceuticals,Inc.announcedtodaytha...ndCEO. ,, Abramsbringsmorethan25yearsofdrugdisc...ntorofthenuclearmedicineimagingagent,Cardiolite,an...sManager,BiomedicalResearchWorldwide.In1996,Abrams...identandCEOfrom1996to2006.AnorMEDdiscoveredanddeve...
Breaking Biology Technology:DNA Genotek Launches Global Partner Program 2DNA Genotek Launches Global Partner Program 3Water droplets direct self-assembly process in thin-film materials 2YM BIOSCIENCES REPORTS FIRST PATIENT IN PHASE I/II TRIAL OF JAK1/JAK2 INHIBITOR, CYT387 ENROLLED BY CYTOPIA 2YM BIOSCIENCES REPORTS FIRST PATIENT IN PHASE I/II TRIAL OF JAK1/JAK2 INHIBITOR, CYT387 ENROLLED BY CYTOPIA 3YM BIOSCIENCES REPORTS FIRST PATIENT IN PHASE I/II TRIAL OF JAK1/JAK2 INHIBITOR, CYT387 ENROLLED BY CYTOPIA 4Inimex Announces Appointment of New CEO 2
Other News:
Washington, D.C. September 13, 2005 . . . . A biologist will receive a 2005 MacArthur Fellowship for work in the role of genes and molecules in multicellular and unicellular life and the process of
COLUMBUS, Ohio Researchers have identified a gene mutation that may increase the risk of prostate cancer up to three times in African-American men with a family history of the disease. ......The stud
PITTSBURGH, Sept. 20 Immune system cells are connected to each other by an extensive network of tiny tunnels that, like a building's hidden pneumatic tube system, are used to shoot signals to distant
..., that had been genetically engineered to develop ...se the rodents' memory loss by reducing the amount...of Alzheimer's disease......."What we are showing ...s of a protein that is necessary for the formation...
Mutation may raise prostate-cancer risk in African Americans 2'Underground' tunnels discovered as means for communication between immune system cells 2'Underground' tunnels discovered as means for communication between immune system cells 3'Underground' tunnels discovered as means for communication between immune system cells 4Targeting a key enzyme with gene therapy reversed course of Alzheimer's disease in mouse models 2Targeting a key enzyme with gene therapy reversed course of Alzheimer's disease in mouse models 3
...h 25, 2002 -- Howard Hughes Medical Institute rese...e way that three different classes of RNA viruses ... one day be a common strategy to kill many differe...us, hepatitis C and polio viruses.......In an arti...
...archers have discovered important clues as to why ...us heart infection in children. ...The bacterium,...ic fever, the most common infectious cause of chil...tates, it has appeared in several localized outbre...
...archers have found that they can enhance memory in...lled PKM. The scientists could trigger memory enha...use version of PKM. The study, published in the Ap...rtant new clue about a fundamental mechanism of me...
Washington, D.C. -22 March 2002- An updated analysis of U.S. President George W. Bush's fiscal year (FY) 2003 budget proposal for research and development (R&D), based on new data from federal agenci
Unexpected links found between many RNA viruses 2Unexpected links found between many RNA viruses 3Scientists reveal secrets of infectious childhood heart disease 2Scientists enhance fruit fly memory using mouse protein: New clue to fundamental brain mechanism 2Definitive analysis of President's FY2003 R&D budget available 2Definitive analysis of President's FY2003 R&D budget available 3