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Source monitoring deficits in hallucinating compared to non-hallucinating patients with schizophrenia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

Jerome Brunelin*
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
Marion Combris
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
Emmanuel Poulet
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
Lassad Kallel
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
Thierry D’Amato
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
Jean Dalery
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
Mohamed Saoud
Affiliation:
EA 3092, UCB Lyon 1, IFR 19, CH Le Vinatier, Service Pr Dalery, 95, boulevard Pinel, 69677Bron, France
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail address: [email protected] (J. Brunelin).
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Abstract

In two source memory tests, hallucinating patients with schizophrenia (N = 30), compared to non-hallucinating (N = 31), are impaired in recognizing internal self-generated items and misattribute them to an external event. They are not impaired in recognizing events from two internal sources. Results support a selective source-monitoring deficit in the occurrence of auditory hallucinations.

Type
Rapid communication
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2006

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References

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