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Review
. 2017 Mar 14:345:203-217.
doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2016.06.005. Epub 2016 Jun 7.

The neural underpinnings of cognitive flexibility and their disruption in psychotic illness

Affiliations
Review

The neural underpinnings of cognitive flexibility and their disruption in psychotic illness

James A Waltz. Neuroscience. .

Abstract

Schizophrenia (SZ) has long been associated with a variety of cognitive deficits, including reduced cognitive flexibility. More recent findings, however, point to tremendous inter-individual variability among patients on measures of cognitive flexibility/set-shifting. With an eye toward shedding light on potential sources of variability in set-shifting abilities among SZ patients, I examine the neural substrates of underlying probabilistic reversal learning (PRL) - a paradigmatic measure of cognitive flexibility - as well as neuromodulatory influences upon these systems. Finally, I report on behavioral and neuroimaging studies of PRL in SZ patients, discussing the potentially influences of illness profile and antipsychotic medications on cognitive flexibility in SZ.

Keywords: basal ganglia; dopamine; prefrontal cortex; psychosis; serotonin; set-shifting.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
(A) Mean percentages of switches occurring × number of trials after a contingency reversal (denoted trial n+x, where x = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, >5). (B) Scatter plot illustrating systematic relationship, in schizophrenia patients, between psychosis severity ratings and the percentages of stages in which a subject switched back to the previously-better stimulus, before completing the stage. Abbreviations: NC, normal controls; LPS, low-positive-symptom patients; HPS, high-positive-symptom patients, BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale.

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