They were recruited through a newspaper ad and had no histories of Axis I psychiatric disorders.
The subjects were shown images on a computer screen for 13, 26, 52, or 104 ms, sometimes upright and sometimes inverted, and were asked to indicate, by pressing one of two keys on a keyboard, whether the image of a face or a tree was located on the left side or on the right side of each drawing.
Results
Schizophrenia patients exhibited significantly less accuracy when they tried to detect upright and inverted faces than normal controls did. Stimulus durations made no difference as the deficit existed across all durations.
Unlike the detection of faces, tree detection was not significantly different for the two groups. A reduced stimulus inversion effect in schizophrenia was shown primarily in faces but not in tree detection. The only interaction shown to be significant was between group and stimulus orientations (upright or inverted). Other interactions were not significant. Tree detection was more accurate in normal controls than in patients, but this finding was independent of stimulus orientation. Antipsychotic drugs that patients were taking did not appear to be correlated with their accuracy in face detection.
Conclusion
The first stage of facial information processing appears to be impaired in schizophrenia. This would be the first and most basic perception in the brain's facial information processing system. The researchers argue that face recognition is "categorically different from recognition of other visual objects" and that a deficit in recognizing a face as a face in schizophrenia patients indicates a problem or impairment in the FFA part of the brain. They argue this because the problem is with detecting faces and not with detecting other visual objects. The researchers state, "The results of this study suggest that this is the case" (Chen et al., 2007, p. 5). For schizophrenics the face inversion effect was significantly greater than for tree inversion. The researchers argue this also...
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