Journal article
Altered short-term neural plasticity related to schizotypal traits: Evidence from visual adaptation
KN Thakkar, A Antinori, OL Carter, JW Brascamp
Schizophrenia Research | ELSEVIER | Published : 2019
Abstract
Abnormalities in synaptic plasticity are argued to underlie the neural dysconnectivity observed in schizophrenia. One way to measure synaptic plasticity is through sensory adaptation, whereby sensory neurons exhibit reduced sensitivity after sustained stimulus exposure. Evidence for decreased adaptation in individuals with schizophrenia is currently inconclusive, possibly due to heterogeneity in clinical and medication status across samples. Here we circumvent these confounds by examining whether altered adaptation is represented sub-clinically in the general population. To test this we used three paradigms from visual perception research that provide a precise and non-invasive index of adap..
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Awarded by National Institute of Mental Health
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a NARSAD Young Investigator award from the Brain and Behavior Foundation (KNT), NIMH R01 MH112644 (KNT), and a grant from the Michigan State University College of Social Sciences Faculty Initiatives Award (JWB, KNT). AA was supported by an Australian Postgraduate Award and OC was supported by the Australian Research Council FFT40100807.