Perceptual Mechanisms of Visual Hallucinations and Illusions in Psychosis.

Journal of psychiatry and brain science Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-08-21 DOI:10.20900/jpbs.20200020
Samuel D Klein, Cheryl A Olman, Scott R Sponheim
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Abstract

Psychosis has been associated with neural anomalies across a number of brain regions and cortical networks. Nevertheless, the exact pathophysiology of the disorder remains unclear. Aberrant visual perceptions such as hallucinations are evident in psychosis, while the occurrence of visual distortions is elevated in individuals with genetic liability for psychosis. The overall goals of this project are to: (1) use psychophysical tasks and neuroimaging to characterize deficits in visual perception; (2) acquire a mechanistic understanding of these deficits through development and validation of a computational model; and (3) determine if said mechanisms mark genetic liability for psychosis. Visual tasks tapping both low- and high-level visual processing are being completed as individuals with psychotic disorders (IPD), first-degree biological siblings of IPDs (SibIPDs) and healthy controls (HCs) undergo 248-channel magneto-encephalography (MEG) recordings followed by 7 Tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). By deriving cortical source signals from MEG and MRI data, we will characterize the timing, location and coordination of neural processes. We hypothesize that IPDs prone to visual hallucinations will exhibit deviant functions within early visual cortex, and that aberrant contextual influences on visual perception will involve higher-level visual cortical regions and be associated with visual hallucinations. SibIPDs who experience visual distortions-but not hallucinations-are hypothesized to exhibit deficits in higher-order visual processing reflected in abnormal inter-regional neural synchronization. We hope the results lead to the development of targeted interventions for psychotic disorders, as well as identify useful biomarkers for aberrant neural functions that give rise to psychosis.

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精神病患者视幻觉和错觉的感知机制。
精神病与多个大脑区域和皮层网络的神经异常有关。然而,这种疾病的确切病理生理学仍不清楚。幻觉等异常视觉感知在精神病中非常明显,而在具有精神病遗传倾向的个体中,视觉扭曲的发生率会升高。本项目的总体目标是(1)利用心理物理任务和神经影像学来描述视觉感知缺陷的特征;(2)通过开发和验证计算模型,从机制上理解这些缺陷;以及(3)确定上述机制是否标志着精神病的遗传责任。精神病患者(IPD)、IPD 患者的一级亲兄弟姐妹(SibIPDs)和健康对照组(HCs)在接受 248 通道脑磁图(MEG)记录和 7 特斯拉功能性磁共振成像(MRI)后,都要完成触及低级和高级视觉处理的视觉任务。通过从 MEG 和 MRI 数据中得出皮层源信号,我们将确定神经过程的时间、位置和协调特征。我们假设,容易产生视觉幻觉的 IPD 会在早期视觉皮层中表现出异常功能,而对视觉感知的异常环境影响将涉及更高级别的视觉皮层区域,并与视觉幻觉相关联。假设出现视觉失真但没有幻觉的西伯利亚综合症患者表现出高阶视觉处理缺陷,这反映在异常的区域间神经同步上。我们希望这些研究结果能为开发针对精神病的干预措施提供帮助,并为导致精神病的异常神经功能找到有用的生物标记物。
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