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Disturbances of affective prosody in patients with schizophrenia; a cross sectional study
  1. Albert F G Leentjensa,
  2. Sandra M Wielaertb,
  3. Frans van Harskampc,
  4. Frederik W Wilminka
  1. aGeneral Psychiatric Hospital, Drenthe, PO Box 30007, 9400 RA Assen, The Netherlands, bRijndam Rehabilitation Centre, and Rotterdam Aphasia Foundation, PO Box 23181, 3001 KD Rotterdam, The Netherlands, cRotterdam University Hospital, Department of Neurology, Dr Molewaterplein 40, 3015 GD Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  1. Dr A F G Leentjens, Department of Psychiatry, Maastricht University Hospital, PO Box 5800, 6202 AZ Maastricht, The Netherlands. Telephone 0031 43 3877443; fax: 0031 43 3875444.

Abstract

The objective was to determine whether disturbances of affective prosody constitute part of the symptomatology of schizophrenia. Affective prosody is defined here as a neuropsychological function that encompasses all non-verbal aspects of language that are necessary for recognising and conveying emotions in communication. Twenty six schizophrenic out-patients and twenty four normal controls underwent a standardised prosody test, assessing four different aspects of affective prosody: spontaneous prosody, prosodic recognition, prosodic repetition, and facial affect recognition.  Patients scored significantly worse than controls on three of the four subtests: spontaneous prosody, prosodic recognition, and prosodic repetition. There were no significant differences on a subtest for facial affect recognition. Differences in educational level between patients and controls could not account for these differences.

  • prosody
  • schizophrenia

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