Daniel (key study) (psychological problems) Flashcards
What was the background?
- Studies had shown low levels of activity in the prefrontal cortexes of people with schizophrenia. This was linked to the activity of dopamine in the brain.
- Studies had suggested that dopamine is important in suppressing random brain activity and helping to focus on specific stimuli in the environment.
What is an agonist?
A substance that stimulates dopamine activity
What was the hypothesis?
If dysfunction in the prefrontal cortex was related to problems in dopamine-controlled synaptic transmission, then an agonist should increase activity in that area during a cognitive task.
How did the researchers scan the participants brain activity?
They scanned the brain using SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography)
What is the Wisconsin card sorting test?
- A game where a participant has a card with pictures of a shape and must match it to another card.
- They must match it by either shape, colour, or number of shapes.
- They do not know what rule they must use to match the card, they figure it out by trial and error
- The rule can randomly change throughout the test
- The main objective is to measure the subject’s ability to shift cognitive strategies in response to changing environmental demands.
What was the dependent variable?
Performance on the Wisconsin card sorting test
What was the independent variable?
Whether the participant had been given amphetamine or not
What was the sample?
- 10 in-patients from the national institute of mental health research in Washington, USA
- All had chronic schizophrenia
- Clinically stable enough to cooperate
- Free of any other illnesses as well as alcohol and drugs
What were the ethical conditions?
- The radiation safety committee had approved the study
- All participants had given informed consent
What were the materials?
- SPECT scanner
- Simple sensori-motor control test (The BAR task, where participants match bars on a screen based on their orientation)
- Prefrontal activation test (WCST)
What was the procedure?
- Participants were on haloperidol to stabilise them for at least 6 weeks before the experiment.
- 5 participants did the BAR task first and 5 did the WCST first (counterbalancing)
- On the 2 test days, each participant either received a dose of amphetamine or a placebo, in an order that was counterbalanced.
- Both tasks were carried out on a computer and required similar motor responses.
What were the results?
- Amphetamine had a minimal effect on regional cerebral blood flow when participants completed both the BAR task and WCST.
- There was no significant differences in the effects of the amphetamine and the placebo on brain activity when completing the BAR task.
- There were some significant differences in the blood flow in particular regions of the brain when completing the WCST
- Amphetamine had a small but significant positive effect on two performance measures of the WCST, including the number of correct responses. There was no such effect when the placebo was used.
- Behaviour changes caused by the amphetamine were highly variable and generally mild, ranging from increased cooperation, optimism, and mood, to irritability and dysphoria. 3 patients showed significant improvement and one patient significantly deteriorated.
What were the conclusions?
- Amphetamine significantly increased prefrontal cortex activity during performance of a cognitive task, despite reducing bloodflow to the brain.
- Showed a link between brain function and key symptoms of schizophrenia.
- Supports biological theory
What were the criticisms?
- Sample size was too small to be generalisable.
- Participants were all volunteers so not representative of all people with schizophrenia.
- The sample was culturally biased as they were all from the USA and 8/10 participants were white. Different ethnic groups have different rates of schizophrenia.
- Using scans on participants with a placebo is unethical as they are subjected to harmful radiation.
- The difference in brain activity may have been affected by the haloperidol give to the participants beforehand. (it was used to stabilise the patients)