Neuroclinical Fingerprint Of Risk For Psychosis: Profiles Of Neurophysiology, Symptom Severity, And Cognitive Function

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY(2020)

引用 0|浏览6
暂无评分
摘要
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: The study aims to utilize event-related potentials (ERPs) coupled with observable reports of symptoms to comprehensively understand neurological and symptomatic profile of individuals at risk for developing psychosis. The study is a short-term longitudinal design which allows for examination of course as well as structure of illness. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: This study uses a combination of well-validated ERPs (P300, N400, ERN) and symptom data to predict variation in symptoms over time. We parse heterogeneity within a high-risk group to create innovative profiles and predict variation in course of symptoms. Data collection is ongoing (n = 35; target N = 100). Methods include a battery of ERP tasks tracking neural processes associated with attention, language processing, and executive function (P300, N400, ERN), along with assessment of symptom type and severity. Analyses include how ERPs correlate with severity of risk and symptom dimensions (positive, negative, disorganized). We examine whether individual versus global ERP aberrations (P300, N400, ERN) predict individual versus global symptom domain severity (positive, negative, disorganized), or vice versa. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Symptom domain scores were elevated compared to general population on positive (M = 1.65, SD = .36), negative (M = 1.9 SD = .42), and depressive (M = 1.94, SD = .40) domains. Small to medium effect sizes emerged for P300 profile (r’s = −.001 to −.41) and ERN profile (r’s = −.03 to −.37), though small effect sizes for N400 profile (r’s = −.06 to .29). Analyses were run to determine the degree to which profiles of risk were similar: P300/ERN (r = −.09), ERN/N400 (r = −.39), and N400/P3 (r = −.20). Additional analyses suggest potential mediating effects of cognition on neural activity and symptoms. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: We use a combination of well-validated ERPs (i.e. P300, N400, ERN) with behavioral and symptom data to predict variation in symptoms over time. A “fingerprint” physiologic aberration may be exhibited within high-risk individuals and can be used as biomarkers to identify those at risk even before onset of observable symptoms.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Event-Related Potentials,Clinical High-Risk States for Psychosis,Cognitive Deficits,Psychotic Symptoms,Risk Profile Scores
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要